Teach Yourself Bagpipes by Lindsay Davidsonbringing quality 'piping instruction to you for freeJOIN THE MAILING LIST BY CLICKING HERE | ||||||
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Main Index Back to Welcome page How to Practice Order of Study Rhythm and Reading Music Exercises Tunes Bagpipes: Transition to Bagpipes Tuning a Bagpipe Getting Better: Using Midi files Intermediate exercises Advanced Band repertoire Links: Where to buy equipment Links to teachers Links to Organisations Links to pipe bands Links (other) Sections Beginners Smallpipes Bands and MAP tunes 6 MSRs Piobaireachd Buy on Amazon! Click the image |
Welcome to the E-School of
'Piping. This is a partly experimental project aimed at allowing aspiring bagpipers with no local teacher to learn by themselves with the confidence that the method has been created by a reputable and highly experienced teacher, Lindsay Davidson. Likewise it is hoped that teachers may come to this resource for ideas, materials and to offer their own suggestions and exercises. Before starting bagpipes, one needs a practice chanter; that is a very quiet and inexpensive instrument for practising at home. There is no need to spend a lot of money on this unless you are absolutely sure you want to play. Here is a page offering a list of chanter and bagpipe suppliers Bagpipe music consists of many rudiments. Each rudiment is described in a separate 'chapter', with an mp3 of it being played - please click on the image. Traditionally one learns all the basic rudiments and then progresses onto simple tunes. A suggested order of study is included although this is some cases can be altered. Each chapter is very short and it is hoped that time will be spent becoming fluent at playing. It is also hoped that approaching this task in small steps will make it easier and more enjoyable. A free program written by Alan Corrie in the mid 1990s, developed together with Lindsay Davidson for the Complete Piping Service can be downloaded here. Please note: There are reports of difficulty in installing this on Windows 7. Pipewriter will be removed from the site in mid 2013. Please add the site to your favourites and keep checking back regularly for upgrades, improvements and new exercises. The site has been translated into Polish and partially into French. If you want to see it in another language and are able to help with translation, please contact the author. The idea behind this website is not only to encourage and enable people to learn to play, but to collect experience and feedback and improve not only the face to face teaching experience, but to create the world's best distant learning programme for bagpipes. You can find out more about bagpipes (and lots of other things) from this howtodothings.com article. Please send your comments to Lindsay Davidson (email: lindsaydavidson(at)lindsaydavidson(dot)co(dot)uk) - they are critical to making this whole project worthwhile. Please feel free to join the mailing list to find out about when changes are made to the teach yourself bagpipes pages - new tunes, new exercises, special events, and also to talk to other beginner pipers. For information of what is planned and what upgrades will be made to the site please click on 'coming soon....'. Happy 'Piping.
| Rudiments Index Hand Position and the Scale Crossing sounds G Gracenotes D Gracenotes E Gracenotes G,D,E Gracenotes exercise Strikes Throws Doublings - general principles Low G Doublings Low A Doublings B Doublings C Doublings D Doublings E Doublings F Doublings High G Doublings High A Doublings Grips Taorluath Birl Tachum Hara | ||||
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