The pipe on the left is not Serbian. It's the type used by Šokči Croats in the south of Hungary and north of Croatia. The Serbian instrument has a rather different shape to the rog (bell) on the chanter and Serbian pipes tend to have a gourd resonator rather than a horn. While the instruments aren't absolutely correlated with a group, one of Corydale's other videos demonstrates this pipe and explains where he got it.
glorious pipering - lovely sound!
66gadus 6 months ago
How to make such instrument? I don't any spare animal to slaughter at hand right now so is it possible to replace the hide bad with other material?
This instrument sounds very interesting and as far I thought I don't like any woodwinds at all I'm enjoying listening to this :D
Max0Inq 9 months ago
Thanks, i stand corrected. They all sound great anyway! Health and happiness to you.
raysteer 2 years ago
The pipe on the left is not Serbian. It's the type used by Šokči Croats in the south of Hungary and north of Croatia. The Serbian instrument has a rather different shape to the rog (bell) on the chanter and Serbian pipes tend to have a gourd resonator rather than a horn. While the instruments aren't absolutely correlated with a group, one of Corydale's other videos demonstrates this pipe and explains where he got it.
fenevadka 2 years ago
With Serbian pipes on the left(:
raysteer 3 years ago
super bravo gajdagija toa ti e republika makedonija vardar egej pirin mala prespa
momcemk 3 years ago
Inspirational! My guess is Hungarian pipes in the background.
raysteer 3 years ago
great job! what type of pipes are those in the background?
gajda1984 3 years ago
great stuff man, keep it up. I would love to produce a chanter like that.
noisybag 3 years ago
beautiful chanter, well done.
Laurensoksan 3 years ago