Thoughts on bagpiping in the San Francisco Bay Area. For more information, contact PiperJohnB.com

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

On Piping Practice


Playing alto saxophone in 4th grade I was faced with the challenge of practicing. My Mom would gently remind me; my band instructor would remind me; listening to my playing would remind me of the need to practice. It’s not that practice makes perfect, but that practice can lead to proficiency. My technique will improve and I will be able to play more challenging music. There is an added component to practice in that it is physically preparing us to play outside of practice. Practicing the sax increased my strength of diaphragm, embouchure, and arms for holding the sax as well as gave my fingers a workout for controlling the instrument. So it is with the bagpipes.

At band practice most any evening we spend time with selected music for focus. We will play on chanters as a pipe corp. Passages will be explored; technique fixed; and unison of play emphasized. At times we will play chanters and pads. We will work with music, then without just watching the PM’s fingers and foot. We will work with metronome, then without. At times we will then play a passage solo with for all to hear. If anything gets me to practice it is knowing I will be playing in front of my peers and the PM. I guess I’m a sucker for peer pressure, even where pressure does not exist. I want to be as good as the top pipers in the band. So practice is part of that needed trajectory.

When we get to playing the pipes, we should expect that the practice translates in any tune. And we see that proficiency is enhanced by this method when we play in the circle. Remembering back to my earliest chanter lessons, my tutor put me through my paces until my lips were sputtering. With each subsequent week I improved and lips strengthened. Today if I set the pipes down for any extended length of time, my lips / chops / embouchure and gut / diaphragm / lungs will be shot and I will once again be left sputtering by the end of practice. But if I keep my pipes going, my time practicing will be fruitful. I will be able to focus on my chanter practice and my pipe practice hopefully increasing my skill.

Every practice do not need to be focused on exercises and memorization. Sometimes the best practice is just to play at a favorite locale, and play for the sheer joy of playing. That too will point out that more practice is needed ;-)



The lesson learned is: practice, Practice, PRACTICE!

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

On piping at the movies

As a kid growing up in Manteca, CA, the movie theatre our family went to was the El Rey Theatre located downtown on Yosemite Ave. at Main St. The classic movies of the 1960’s played on our local Art Deco screen. Ben Hur, Bridge Over the River Kwai, Operation Petticoat, Camelot and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea were among the many we watched there. My folks would pay a little extra for loge seating while my sister, brother and I sat in the regular seats below. It was at the El Rey that my Dad took the family to see Disney’s The Three Lives of Thomasina, and is the first film I recall seeing bagpipes played in. That I was probably just a little younger than the character playing the pipes helped my fascination, but I thought his playing was very good (not knowing about movie magic of dubbing in music over a pretending player).

A great site for is called Bagpipes Go to the Movies: http://fraser.cc/pipes/movies.html Compiled by: Scott Williams & Alistair B. Fraser this site is a work of pretty amazing scope and an obvious errand of love of all things bagpipes. Well worth bookmarking, the site offers some interesting comments about a great range of movies. For example, I looked up “Thomasina” and they have the following description, ”1963 This Disney film has a little boy playing the pipes at a cat's funeral. Thomasina is the cat and the boy plays Macintosh's Lament (very only a few mistakes) and Loch Lomond. He's obviously not really playing and his hands are reversed on the chanter. At one point he drops the pipes but the bag remains fully inflated.” Looking for bagpipes at the movies? Here’s a few of my favorites:


The Quiet Man - with John Wayne.

Kidnapped – Bagpipe dual instead of swords

Wee Willie Winkie – with Shirley Temple

Brigadoon – with Gene Kelly

The Longest Day – star cast with Bill Millin portrayed

The Fugitive – with Harrison Ford

Joyous Noel – Christmas ceasefire in WWI

My Bunny Lies Over the Seas – Bugs Bunny cartoon classic

Over the years the list of bagpiping in movies, and television, has grown. Ask a piper and he may recall a film immediately, as I have. A more recent movie featuring bagpipes was Robert Downey Jr.’s Sherlock Holmes, A Games of Shadows, released in 2011. Bagpipes play for Dr. Watson’s wedding. Also, my wife and I just finished watching the online streaming of the British TV series Outlander with opening credits played to Skye Boat Song with a singer and bagpipes. The series also features highland pipes in a couple of episodes. And thanks to the ever expanding work on the internet, you may see a movie, hearing the pipes and wonder what tune you heard. First go to the site above, or do a Bing or Google search and you are likely to find your answer. Finding the music may be a little more challenging, but that’s just half the fun. Enjoy going to the movies. Or pop some popcorn, rent a movie and you may be surprised at the pipes you hear.