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Encyclopedia :
P :
PI :
PIP :
Pipe band |
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Pipe bandA pipe band is a group of pipers and drummers.The most common kind is the Scottish pipe band, consisting of Highland pipers, snare and tenor drummers, and a single bass drummer. The pipe band began life in the military, but its origins are obscure, and historical records exist mostly in hints gleaned from contemporary regimental records that had no direct interest in pipes. Drumming is, of course, as ancient as the Army itself, and to be a drummer in the Army even today carries a cachet unlike any other Army musician. By the time of the Crimean War, pipe bands were well established. WWI was both a tragedy and a boost for piping: during the early years of the conflict, pipers played over the top of the trenches as they had done since the time of the Jacobite Risings. The Royal Scots played them going into battle in the 1970s, and the Black Watch played into battle during the second Gulf War. In 1947 (??) the Scottish Pipe Band Association (Now the Royal SPBA) was formed, and immediately held a World Championship. Competition was by no means a new thing to pipe bands; indeed a thriving scene had existed in the thirties. Since then, pipe bands have become more and more popular; in 1987, a Canadian band, the 78th Fraser Highlanders, won the World Championships, and since then several overseas bands have gone on to lift the title. The future for pipe bands is unclear. At present, the vast majority of bands exist to compete, and only to compete. This system is increasingly felt to be musically stifling, although it does demand high standards. Whether it is possible to transition to a Breton model, where competitions are far more unrestricted, is under discussion. Other alternatives, such as bands dropping out of the performance scene entirely, seem unlikely. A lesser-known type of pipe band is the bagade, a French invention modelled on the Scottish pipe band. They began in the thirties, to counter the widespread decay of the living Breton folk tradition. Nowadays, a bagade consists of a cornemuse section (a cornemuse is essentially a French made Great Highland Bagpipe which has a characteristically Breton tone), a bombarde section, a drum corps, perhaps more accurately described nowadays as a 'large and varied percussion section' (one band's percussionists lug around a huge metal model elephant), and any additional musical instruments the band wishes to add. |
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