Yes they did bring the bagpipe to the US.
usually in traditional Scottish pieces.
Most world cultures have some form of bagpipe in their cultural history, when most people think of bagpipes they are thinking of the Great Highland Bagpipe, which are scottish.
Scottish Country Dancing and bagpipe music.
Another word for a bagpipe player is a "piper." This term is commonly used to refer to musicians who play the bagpipes, particularly in traditional Scottish and Irish music. The term "chanter" can also refer to the part of the bagpipe played by the piper, but it is not a synonym for the player themselves.
A bagpipe is a Scottish instrument that requires one to blow vast amount of air into it to make music. A drum is a box with a skin on top on which one pounds with a stick to make music.
Just go to any Scottish festival and introduce yourself to one of the pipers. He/she is now famous.
yes
There are many, but the most famous one is the bagpipes, which the majority of Scots dislike.
The general Scottish dance band comprises of: Lead Accordion Accompanying Accordion - "The second box" Keyboard Player Double Bass Player Fiddler Drummer This is known as a six-piece band.
The bagpipe is a woodwind instrument. The melody part of the bagpipe (the chanter) has a double reed, so it could go under the sub-heading "double reed woodwind instrument" - but this depends on the source ethnicity of the instrument in question (the Scottish Highland Bagpipe has a double reed, whereas a Swedish bagpipe may not). :) Peace out!
it pipes in a bag its a simpal as that
thoir