Illustrated Bagpipe Glossary
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The Basic Terminology |
(Italicised terms are defined within the glossary) |
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ARUNDO DONAX ~ a species of cane native to large areas of Western Europe used for reed-making.
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BAG ~ a flexible but airtight structure, its only openings are an air inlet (see blowpipe) and one
or more outlets that feed air into the sound-producing pipes. A bag does not stretch when inflated, like a balloon - thus
it must be squeezed, or more air must be blown into it, for air to flow to the pipes. |
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BAG COVER ~ a more or less elaborate cloth covering of the bag itself that serves a primarily decorative
function. |
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BELL ~ the flared outlet portion of some chanters and drones. The final opening of a
bell may be wide, like a trumpet, or it may narrow back down to a small opening. See also Cowhorn Bell. |
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BELLOWS ~ bellows, usually more or less of the familiar fireplace configuration, are used on various
bagpipes as an air supply. One side (cheek) of the bellows is usually attached to the player's waist by a belt, the other
to the upper arm by a strap. A short hose or pipe connects the outlet of the bellows to the bag. |
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BLADE ~ the vibrating element of a reed - see also tongue. |
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BLOWPIPE ~ the pipe through which the piper inflates the bag and supplies air for the reed,
except in the case of bellows - blown pipes. Usually fitted with a flap-valve to prevent air from backing out
while the piper takes a breath. |
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BORE ~ no, not the slide show of your cousin's camping trip, but rather the hollow passage running
through a chanter or drone in which the sound is produced, fitted at one end with a reed and either open
or closed at the other. The bore shape is usually circular in cross-section, while lengthwise it may be either tapered
(conical) or not (cylindrical). |
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BRIDLE ~ a tuning device for a reed, often nothing more than a few turns of thread looped around
the reed and knoted. By sliding the bridle up or down the length of a drone reed, the length of the vibrating tongue
and thus the pitch of the reed is altered. |
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CANE ~ the raw material, botanically a group of grasses having stiff tubular bamboo-like stems, of
which reeds, or in some cases entire pipes are made. The most common cane used in bagpipes is Arundo Donax, but other
varieties are used as well. |
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CLOSED BORE ~ refers to a chanter bore that has no outlet at the end opposite the reed. This
means that when all the fingerholes are covered the pipe produces no sound, thus allowing silences to be "played" between
notes. |
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CLOSED FINGERING ~ refers to a chanter configured so that the fingerholes are normally
closed, except for whichever ones are opened to play one or another note. Often found in conjunction with closed bores. |
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COMBING ~ decorative turning consisting of more or less tightly spaced narrow circular grooves, found
here and there on many pipes, particularly on drones and particularly on Great Highland pipes. |
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COWHORN BELL ~ a bell on the outlet end of a chanter or drone, made from a cowhorn,
often decorated, or made from wood and/or metal in the shape of a cowhorn. Most often found on Eastern European and Mediterranean
pipes, cowhorn bells provide a visual link to one of the bagpipe's very early ancestors, the hornpipe. |
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DOUBLE CHANTER ~ chanters with two bores and two sets of fingerholes are found on a
number of bagpipes and in several variations. On some, both bores have the same fingerhole spacing and so sound in unison.
On others, one bore may have only a single fingerhole and is used as a sort of alternating-tone drone. An altogether
different use of the term applies it to pipes with two seperate chanters (for example the various Italian Zampognas). |
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DRESSING ~ well, no, probably mayonaise is not a good choice - dressing refers not to something for
a salad but to one or another usually more or less liquid concoction intended to keep or restore the airtightness and suppleness
of the leather bag. Substances used include milk, honey, whiskey, vinager etc. etc., and it behooves the novice piper
to be cautious about accepting some of the suggestions heard. |
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DRONE ~ a pipe that produces - usually - a single uninterupted note, tuned to a specific relationship
to one of the notes of the chanter (for example, an octave below the chanter keynote). Some drones have devices by
which an alternate note can be sounded, either during play or by performing an adjustment between tunes. All drones have some
provision for tuning, commonly by adjusting the bore length via sliding joints or other mechanical arrangement,
or by adjusting the reed - either by changing its depth of seating and/or by altering the weight and/or the
effective length of the reed's vibrating blade(s). Drones may be mounted alone, together with one or more other drones
in a common stock, in a common stock next to a chanter, within a chanter, or within an assembly containing multiple
drones. |
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ELDER ~ in regions where cane is (or was) unavailable, other materials are used for reeds.
The Elder tree is one of these. |
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FERRULE ~ a band, usually of a metal such as brass, copper or silver, mounted around the ends
of stocks, drone joints and blowpipes to be both decorative and to reinforce thin-walled areas
of these and similar parts. |
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FINGERHOLES ~ holes that intersect the bore of a chanter or (rarely) a drone
and that when covered or uncovered by the player's fingers alter the effective length of the bore and thus the pitch of the
tone produced. Fingerholes may be undercut or bored at a slant to the bore axis, and vary widely among different bagpipes
in size and shape. |
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Flap Valve ~ a simple but important device that keeps air from backing out of a blowpipe when
the piper takes a breath. The name comes from the fact that the valve is nothing more than a flap of leather that is mounted
so as to occlude the airway when air pressure becomes greater on the inside than on the outside. Bellows-operated pipes
commonly have two flap valves, one in the air-inlet of the bellows (usually in one of the cheeks) and the other in the connecting
pipe between the bellows and the bag. |
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FLEA-HOLE ~ a very small - thus the name - chanter fingerhole that when opened causes
the notes played to jump upward above the nominal range of the pipe. |
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FONTENNELLE ~ a rigid tubular cover that fits over the lowest key on some bagpipe chanters
(notably Italian Zampognas), covering all of the key except the very end of the actuating lever. Usually made of the same
material as the chanter or the chanter's trimwork. |
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GOAT ~ the bags of many bagpipes, especially Eastern European and Mediterrnean pipes, are made
of goatskin. Carved goat heads, sometimes elaborate, are found on some of these pipes, serving as chanter stocks. |
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GOOSE ~ a bagpipe, usually a Great Highland, equipped with only a chanter and no drone
(or with the drones plugged), intended to allow beginning players to practice and develop their ability without having to
deal with too much at once. |
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GRACE NOTES ~ because most bagpipes have no silences available between notes it is necessary to separate
notes - especially when the same note is played twice in a row - with a short note between. In some traditions, notably that
of the Great Highland Bagpipe, groups of grace notes are sometimes used, with their own nomenclature and notation. |
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HORN ~ horn of various kinds is used in construction of many bagpipes, as bells, ferrules
etc. Most common is cow horn, but sheep and goat are also employed. |
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HORNPIPE ~ an ancient mouth-blown reed instrument that is clearly related to some sorts of
bagpipes. The term is also applied to a form of music. |
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JOINT ~ rather than referring to the connection between two parts, it is the entire section of drones
that are so called. Thus, for example, a typical three-piece Western European drone has (in addition to its stock)
a bottom (or lower), a middle and a top (or upper) joint. |
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KEY ~ as with other woodwinds, the term applies to a mechanism, usually simple and made of metal and
a bit of leather, which serves to open or close holes in thebore of a pipe in order to obtain certain notes. Bagpipes
in general do not have much keywork; often a single key is fitted near the lower end of large chanters, which effectively
serves to extend the reach of the piper's fingers. There are notable exceptions - few woodwinds have more keys than some Uilleann
pipes (with their auxillary drone-like pipes called regulators), and the French Musette de Cour and some Northumbrian
Smallpipes are loaded with elaborate keywork. |
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MOUNTS ~ in general refers to the trimwork on the wooden parts of a bagpipe - some of it functional,
some not. Pipes are sometimes referred to as full-mounted, meaning that all terminations of all the component wooden parts
are fitted with metal, ivory, horn, various plastics and so on, or half-mounted, meaning that certain parts are left in plain
wood (for example the tuning tenons of the drones). |
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OPEN FINGERING ~ refers to a chanter on which most, if not all, notes are generally sounded
with various, again if not all, of the fingerholes below the note open, rather than closed. See also closed fingering.
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OVERBLOWN NOTES ~ are notes above a chanter's normal range, produced by momentarily increasing
air pressure, certain fingerings, or a combination of both. |
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PICK ~ many bagpipes' chanters are commonly brought into tune by applying bits of wax
to the fingerholes, thus effectively changing their position slightly along the bore. This is necessary at times
because of changes in a reed, the weather or sometimes (it seems) the phases of the moon. A short pointed tool - a
pick - is handy for applying and removing wax, and nicely carved ones are more or less standard equipment for some pipes.
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POPPING VALVE ~ the Irish Uilleann pipe, played with closed fingering, can be silenced between
notes by pressing the chanter outlet against the top of the seated player's thigh. Uillean pipers often wear a sort
of small leather apron on their thighs against which to seal the chanter. A popping valve is a mechanical device at the chanter's
end which accomplishes the same task more positively and with less fuss. |
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PRACTICE CHANTER ~ a chanter, especially designed and constructed to be both quiet and somewhat
hard to blow, with which a piper can learn fingerings and/or tunes while also either developing or maintaining necessary lung
and mouth power, all without drawing small-arms fire from the neighbors. The fingerhole placement is the same as on
an ordinary chanter, but practice chanters usually are pitched an octave lower. Commonly, practice chanters are associated
with the Great Highland pipe, but there are ones made for other bagpipes as well. |
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REED ~ a device that opens and closes (more or less) rapidly as air passes through it into the bore
of a woodwind, thus creating a vibration in the bore which is perceived as sound. Bagpipe reeds are of two basic types - single-blade,
similar in action to a clarinet reed, though constructed differently, and double-blade, similar to an oboe reed. The exact
configuration of reeds varies from type to type of pipe. In general, reeds are the "heart" of a bagpipe, and because with
a few exceptions they must be made by the piper they are the objects of a great deal of time and attention. A little later
on we plan to have a section of this site focused on them. |
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REGULATOR ~ a closed pipe on a Uillean pipe fitted with a reed and normally closed keys that
can be operated with either the fingers or the edge of the lower hand, thus sounding accompanying notes (or in the case of
pipes with multiple regulators, chords) to the chanter. |
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RUSH ~ a tuning device inserted into the bore of a melody pipe, consisting, classically, of
a straw-like plant stem shaved along its length so as to be thicker at some selected spots than at others. Its function is
to tune selected notes along the melody pipe, by effectively narrowing the bore more in some places than others. Sean Folsom
has developed a modification to this system that is more convenient and quicker to apply - rather than using a straw, he applies
blobs of beeswax to selected spots along a stiff wire. |
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SEAT ~ the socket at one end of a chanter or drone into which the reed fits.
A seat may or may not have the same cross-section as the adjacent bore. Some degree of tuning is possible by changing
the depth of a reed in its seat. |
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SOLE ~ the disk-like trim, made of ivory, plastic or metal (sometimes silver) mounted at the outlet
end of a chanter. |
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STANDING PARTS ~ generally refers to the bottom drone sections of a bagpipe, that is, those
that are not moved in relation to the bag when the drone is tuned. |
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STAPLE ~ a small usually metal tube, either cylindrical or conical in shape, onto which the blades
of a reed are tied. |
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STOCK ~ a short hollow part of a bagpipe acting as a connection between the bag and the various
pipes. Stocks are usually tied into the bag with stout thread or cord, in such a way that the seal around them is airtight.
Stocks may be turned or carved and may accept one or more pipes. |
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TENON ~ in general, an end of a pipe, of diminished diameter, which fits into an adjacent part. Thus,
for example the tenon of a chanter fits into the chanter stock. Many bagpipes are equipped with drones
having multiple sections (see joints) that have very long tenons and correspondingly long sockets in the adjacent sections.
This arrangement allows the overall length, and thus the pitch, of the drone to be adjusted. All tenons have some provision
to keep them from falling out of their sockets and for making an airtight connection - most common is thread wrapped around
the tenon, but cork, o-rings, and other materials are also employed. Some systems use the shape of the tenon to create a firm
sealed connection - notably, various Italian pipes use bare tapered tenons mating into tapered sockets, and screw threads
carved into wood or ivory are also seen. |
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TIE IN ~ refers to the process of attaching components - usually various stocks - to a bag
by tying them into holes made in the bag (or there naturally in the case of bags made of whole animal skins). |
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TONGUE ~ the vibrating part of a reed; the term is somewhat interchangeable with blade,
but is usually reserved for the blade of a round-body single-bladed reed of the sort commonly employed in Western European
drones. |
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VENT HOLE ~ a hole (or holes) found on some chanters below all of the fingerholes and
keys that determines the low note of the chanter. Also sometimes called a "voicing hole." |
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WAX ~ of various sorts, often beeswax, is used in assorted places on many bagpipes, most noticeably
to fine-tune notes by application around the edges of fingerholes, but also less visibly to change the pitch of reeds
by adding weight to their blades. Rushes are another place wax may be found, and waxed thread is often used
as a wrap on tenons and in sewing bags. Finally, beeswax is sometimes a component of bag dressing concoctions.
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YOKE ~ a structure designed to hold two pipes - for example a chanter and a drone or
a pair of drones - together. |
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