Teach Yourself Bagpipes by Lindsay Davidsonbringing quality 'piping instruction to you for free | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Main Index Back to Welcome page How to Practice Order of Study Rhythm and Reading Music Exercises Tunes Bagpipes: Transition to Bagpipes Tuning a Bagpipe Getting Better: Using Midi files Intermediate exercises Advanced Band repertoire Links: Where to buy equipment Links to teachers Links to Organisations Links to pipe bands Links (other) |
B
Doublings Exercise This
exercise is designed to allow the player to control when gracenotes open and
close in a doubling. There are three midi files here; slow medium and fast. All
of the proportions between the gracenotes and notes are exactly the same. The
most common mistake in piping is to think that one is playing too slowly.
Typically this is only an impression and the real problem is that the proportion
between the length of the gracenotes is ‘wrong’. In this exercise the first gracenote opens before the beat, and closes (making the note being doubled) ON the beat. The cutting which doubles the note is shorter than this and comes after the beat. The vast majority of doublings will be played this way. Sometimes the first gracenote will be longer, and sometimes shorter. This exercise will help you have the ability to change this as you like.
| Rudiments Index Hand Position and the Scale Crossing sounds G Gracenotes D Gracenotes E Gracenotes G,D,E Gracenotes exercise Strikes Throws Doublings - general principles Low G Doublings Low A Doublings B Doublings C Doublings D Doublings E Doublings F Doublings High G Doublings High A Doublings Grips Taorluath Birl Tachum Hara | |||
| |||||