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What Are Your Kids Going To Be Doing This Spring?

Mom and Dad, Give your kids the life-long gift of music this summer by enrolling them in bagpipe lessons. You could even learn right alongside them. Click here for details or contact us for more information.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What is the band's motto?  "Inspire the living.  Honor the fallen."

  • What is the band's tartan?  MacFarlane Red (Modern)

  • What chanter does the band use? Dunbar Elite 1

  • Do I have to be Scottish or Irish to play the bagpipes?  Of course not.

  • Can ladies play too?  Absolutely.

  • What about kids?  Absolutely.  Kids are welcome to learn and perform with the band.  Around age 8 little fingers are able to play the chanter.  We'd LOVE to teach your child to play the pipes!  Drummers should be at least 14 and preferably have some drumming experience in their school marching band.

  • Is Clear Lake Caledonian Pipe Band a competition band? No.  Competition, however beneficial it may be, is not the primary focus of this group.  However, individual members are encouraged to enter at least one solo competition each year to increase their exposure to the piping community and to gain valuable neutral third-party feedback on their playing ability.

  • I play with another pipe and drum band.  May I also play in this band?  Absolutely yes! Membership in this band will not affect your ability to enter a competition as a member of another band.

  • Is bagpiping expensive?  Not really.  Beginners only need to buy a "practice chanter" which costs around $50.  The book we use costs around $30. 

  • Are bagpipes difficult to learn to play?  No.  There are only nine melody notes on the bagpipes (compared with eighty-eight on a piano).  There are also a handful of standard finger movements used to embellish pipe music. Learning to play the pipes is akin to learning to touch type.

  • Do I have to know how to play the bagpipes before I can join the band?  No.  In fact, the band offers bagpipe lessons to those wishing to learn to play.  The only thing we ask is that you practice regularly and commit to playing with the band once you become a competent piper.

  • Are there private instructors available to teach the bagpipes?  We will be happy to put you in contact with a private instructor, if you would like personalized instruction.  Students who take private lessons generally excel more quickly than those who rely on group lessons.

  • Do you have to have exceptionally powerful lungs to play the pipes?  No.  Properly set up pipes are relatively easy to play.  Even children as young as 8 or 9 years old are able to play the Great Highland Bagpipes.  Bagpiping is more about coordination than brute force. 

  • I've never played a musical instrument before.  Will it be harder for me to learn?  You'll probably do just fine.

  • I already play trombone/piano/guitar/clarinet/violin/etc.  Will it be easier for me to learn?  If you already read music, you'll be a little bit ahead of the game.  But  the bagpipes are unlike any other western instrument.  You will still have to practice diligently to learn this new instrument.

  • What will I be expected to purchase?  Performing members of the band are responsible for acquiring their own instrument and uniform.  To help defray these costs, all proceeds from paid performances are shared equally among those members participating in the event.  If a member performs regularly with the band, he or she will earn enough money to cover uniform and incidental expenses.

  • How much do bagpipes cost? In about six to twelve months, when it's time to start looking in earnest for a set of Great Highland Bagpipes, you'll find that they cost about the same as any other quality band instrument.  A set of Great Highland Bagpipes can be bought new for $800-1,500.  Used pipes are available for less.  We will be glad to help you find a good set of pipes when the time is right for you.

  • My great-great uncle Angus MacScotty left me his bagpipes in his will.  Are they any good for playing?  Quite possibly, yes!  But maybe not.  Let's have a look at them.  The "valuable" things on a set of bagpipes are the sticks (everything that's wood).  Everything else can be replaced (such as the bag, the reeds, the cords, the ribbons, the bag cover, the string wrappings, the smelly old case, etc.).  It is the wooden parts that must be scrutinized for cracks, deformities, or other problems.  And if older pipes are to be brought back into playing condition, it needs to be done very, very gradually and carefully.  With some work and a little luck, you just may have a great set of playable bagpipes.  And if not, you still have a wonderful family heirloom. 

  • Is there a book/DVD/website where I can learn the pipes on my own?  No. Bagpipes are not one of those instruments that a person can learn on their own.  While they are not that difficult to learn, there are MANY things about the instrument which are not obvious.  Without an instructor, a person is almost certainly predetermined to fail.

  • Bagpipes are cool!  We agree!  What's your question?

  • Why did some ancient person ever decide it'd be a good idea to put a "bag" on an instrument?  Think of the bag as a third, reserve lung.  Pipers blow the instrument and sound comes out just like every other wind instrument.  However, when other instrumentalists run out of air, they have to stop the sound and take a breath.  Pipers, on the other hand, have a reserve sack of air ready.  When pipers need to take a breath, they stop blowing and start squeezing the bag which gives them a good 7-10 seconds to get another breath of air to begin blowing again.  It's a third lung.  Very handy!  Pipers have been known to play over 30-45 minutes (or longer) without there ever being a break in the music.

  • I would like to play drums.  We would love to have you!  Whether you're new to drumming or have some experience, highland drumming is relatively easy to learn.

  • What kinds of drums do the band use?  There are three types of drums used by pipe and drum bands.  They are the bass drum, the snare drum, and the single tenor drum.  For every snare drummer, we would like to have a corresponding tenor drummer. Pipe bands typically have only one bass drummer.

  • Does the band prefer rudimental tenor drummers or flourishing tenor drummers?  Either. For those who don't know, rudimental tenor drummers often reinforces or alternates with the snare drummers.  Flourishing tenor drummers are more for visual show than complimenting the sound of the drum line.  Flourishes are visually appealing stick twirling motions.

  • Is pipe band drumming different than other drumming I've done in the past (such as marching band, DCI, and Drum & Bugle Corps)?  Yes.  Pipe band drumming is completely different than these other styles of drumming.  The good news is, it is very easy to learn and fun to play.

  • Must I wear a kilt?  There's no rule that says a person must wear a kilt in order to play the bagpipes. Many pipers don't wear a kilt.  However, the public has certain expectations of bagpipers.  One of those expectations is that a piper should be in a kilt.  It's a mystique that people link with piping.  For that reason, most (not all) pipe bands still include the kilt as part of their uniforms.  Kilts are very comfortable and fun to wear.  Our band requires the men to be in kilt for band performances but allows women alternate dress options.

  • Won't I feel silly parading around in a skirt?  It's not a skirt!  It's a kilt!  The kilt is a man's garment.  A skirt is a woman's garment.  They are not the same.  Kilts are not the least bit feminine.  Quite to the contrary, kilts punctuate masculine confidence!  They are even a little barbaric (kilt wearers usually carry a black dagger in our right sock).  Women can't resist a man in a kilt.  Men will envy you.  Think Braveheart, not Tootsie!

  • What's worn under a kilt? There are hundreds of witty replies to this often-asked question. You will certainly want to memorize a few (you will be asked). Jokes aside, statistics show that approximately half of kilt wearers wear an undergarment.  Highland athletes and dancers ALL wear undergarments.  Highland military regiments aside, it is a matter of personal preference.  If a person expects that there might be a risk of exposure due to the activity, usually something else is worn.  Kilts are very HEAVY garments (16oz wool) and, along with a metal kilt pin for added weight, are designed not to fly around like Marilyn Monroe's skirt. 

 

Band Rehearsal is
2:30-4:30
PM

* * *
BAND CURRENTLY ON BREAK
* * *

Sundays
at
University Baptist Church
16106 Middlebrook Drive, Houston, TX 77059
[MAP]
(2nd floor choir room behind sanctuary)

Brian Berlin, Pipe Major
(281) 535-2626 h
(713) 249-2978 c
berlin (at) clcpb.com

For Piper/Band Booking, Contact:

Brenton Scharbor, Pipe Sergeant
Public Relations
(832) 275-3934 c
scharbor (at) clcpb.com

 

Protect Your Hearing

Clear Lake Pipe Band strongly encourages all pipers and drummers to protect their hearing by using ear plugs.

 

 

Bagpipe Quotes

I was accosted with an excellent bagpipe, and I think our meal danced down our throats the merrylier. Thomas Browne 1650