Bagpipes: Difference between revisions
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The rural country bagpipe existed in Lincolnshire, Leicestershire, Cheshire, Derbyshire, Lancashire and many more counties besides. | The rural country bagpipe existed in Lincolnshire, Leicestershire, Cheshire, Derbyshire, Lancashire and many more counties besides. | ||
* A Wikipedia overview [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bagpipes] | |||
* | * The Bagpipe Society [http://www.bagpipesociety.org.uk/] | ||
* [ | * The World of Bagpipes [http://www.bagpipeworld.co.uk/index.html] | ||
* [ | * The Nothumbrian Piper's Society [http://www.northumbrianpipers.org.uk/] | ||
* The Lowland and Border Pipers Society [https://lbps.net/j3site/index.php] | |||
* The Pipers Gathering - Alternative Pipers of North America [http://pipersgathering.org/apna_old/] | |||
{Please expand this list} | {Please expand this list} |
Latest revision as of 12:09, 17 March 2018
Many people, on hearing the word bagpipe, think of the Great Highland bagpipe of Scotland - the piob mòr. There are, in reality, many different bagpipes in the British Isles and even more in Europe.
The rural country bagpipe existed in Lincolnshire, Leicestershire, Cheshire, Derbyshire, Lancashire and many more counties besides.
- A Wikipedia overview [1]
- The Bagpipe Society [2]
- The World of Bagpipes [3]
- The Nothumbrian Piper's Society [4]
- The Lowland and Border Pipers Society [5]
- The Pipers Gathering - Alternative Pipers of North America [6]
{Please expand this list}
Articles
The Bagpipe in Northern England by R.D.Cannon in The Folk Music Journal - Vol.2 No.2 1971
J B Marriott, The Bagpipe in Northern England [letter] - Vol.2 No.5 1974
English Bagpipe Music by R D Cannon in The Folk Music Journal Vol.2 No.3 1972