Pipe (instrument)

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Pipe
Classification

Playing range

1-2 octaves
Related instruments

Pipe describes a number of musical instruments, historically referring to perforated wind instruments. The word is an onomatopoeia, and comes from the tone which can resemble that of a bird chirping.

Folk pipe

Examples of Polish folk pipe made of willow bark (Polish: "fujara, fujarka"),[1] maybe up to 40cm long.

Fipple flutes are found in many cultures around the world. Often with six holes, the shepherd's pipe is a common pastoral image. Shepherds often piped both to soothe the sheep and to amuse themselves. Modern manufactured six-hole folk pipes are referred to as pennywhistle or tin whistle. The recorder is a form of pipe, often used as a rudimentary instructional musical instrument at schools, but so versatile that it is also used in orchestral music, but it has seven finger holes and a thumb hole.

Tabor pipe

The three-holed pipe is a form of the folk pipe which is usually played with one hand, while the other hand plays a tabor or other drone instrument, such as a bell or a psalterium (string-drum).

In English this instrument is properly called simply a pipe, but is often referred to as a tabor pipe to distinguish it from other instruments. The tabor pipe has two finger holes and one thumb hole. In the English tradition, these three holes play the same notes as the bottom three holes of a tin whistle, or tone, tone, semitone. Other tabor pipes, such as the French galoubet, the Picco pipe, the Basque txistu and xirula, the Aragonese chiflo or the Andalusian pito rociero, are tuned differently.

A much larger (typically 150 to 170 cm long), sophisticated 3-hole pipe played by a growing number of enthusiasts is the Slovakian fujara, made of two connected parallel pipes of different lengths. This is not to be mistaken with the Polish single pipe, which is a much smaller (maybe up to 40 cm) old-fashioned instrument usually made of willow bark (Polish: "fujara, fujarka").[1] It also exists in locally modified modern versions (also played,[2] for example in Toronto at "The Pride of Poland", a 2005 concert featuring symphonic and Polish folk music). Similar to both of these is the Czech fujara.[3]

The pipe and tabor was a common combination throughout Europe, during the mediæval period, and remains popular in some parts of Europe and the Americas today. The English pipe and tabor had waned in popularity, but had not died out before a revival by Morris dance musicians in the early 20th century.

Traditionally made of cane, bone, ivory, or wood, today pipes are also available made of metal and of plastic.

Flageolet

A 19th Century flageolet.

The flageolet was developed from the tabor pipe, in France, and became an orchestral instrument.[4] Its lower three holes were configured the same as a tabor pipe, with two on front and one on back. A second set of three holes was added above this. The mouthpiece had a unique configuration with a sponge inside.

Used as orchestral instruments into the 19th Century, the flageolet was given keys, like in the orchestral flute.

Reed pipe

A reed pipe is an instrument which is similar in construction to the fipple flutes but instead of a whistle mouthpiece, has a (usually) double reed, like the oboe.

Hornpipe

Hornpipes are instruments with one or more pipes that have single reeds that terminate in a resonator made of horn. Simple instruments may consist of little more than the reed, the pipe, and the resonator. More complex instruments may have multiple pipes held in a common yoke, multiple resonators, or horn mouthpieces to facilitate playing. They are known from a broad region extending from India in the east to Spain in the west that includes north Africa and most of Europe.[5]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 (Polish) Budownictwo drzewne i wyroby z drzewa w dawnej Polsce. vol. 2, pp. 27 & 28 (English title: Wooden architecture and wooden artifacts in historic Poland), Warszawa 1909.
  2. Krzeptowski playing on small pipe folk instrument (Polish: polska "fujara, fujarka" góralska), foto: Robert Rozowski" from Rozbicki.com also in Google Images, Retrieved 2009-12-12
  3. In Google Images: image 1, image 2 from www.folklorika.cz, Retrieved 2009-12-12
  4. The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Morris Book by Cecil J. Sharp
  5. {{Baines, Anthony C. 1995 Bagpipes, 3rd ed. Occasional Papers on Technology. Oxford: Pitt Rivers Museum.}}

See also

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