The three pipes protruding from the top of the bag are known as drones. The longer bass drone is tuned one octave below the two shorter tenor drones. The pipe protruding from the bottom of the bag, which is held by the piper, is known as a chanter. The low A of the chanter is one octave above the tenor drones.
We just call it the bag...
The bagpipes have three drones, and the other is called the chanter. This is the part that the piper covers various holes with his fingers to produce the melody.
4th Grade band "Mains of Fintry Pipe Band" from Dundee.
A bagpipe band.
Bagpipe
Here is a list of instruments present in the Antiquity Period: Bagpipe, Dulcian, Harp, Kortholt, Organetto, Rackett, Sacbut, Lute, Pipe and Tabor.
bagpipe
The bagpipes have three drones, and the other is called the chanter. This is the part that the piper covers various holes with his fingers to produce the melody.
4th Grade band "Mains of Fintry Pipe Band" from Dundee.
A bagpipe band.
Bagpipe
it pipes in a bag its a simpal as that
musettes
Here is a list of instruments present in the Antiquity Period: Bagpipe, Dulcian, Harp, Kortholt, Organetto, Rackett, Sacbut, Lute, Pipe and Tabor.
Yes they did bring the bagpipe to the US.
make a pouch and flute together = bagpipe
Bagpipes, because there is one bag and many pipes in/on the instrument.
No, the bagpipes are Scottish. There is a kind of instrument called the Uillean pipes that is Irish, which is similar to the bag pipes. Instead of blowing into it, it uses a bellows attached to the musician's elbow to blow wind into the bag. The musician plays a pipe with the hand, similar to what is on a bagpipes.