Playford on pipe and tabor
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Uploader Comments (mayhillgurdy)
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All Comments (18)
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@mayhillgurdy Nearly nobody knows that there is a fine version of Grimstock for 4 (instrumental) voices in Michael Praetorius´TERPSICHORE, #154, printed Wolfenbüttel 1612, and thus 40 years older than Playford !
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Oh wow! I was looking through a list of Medieval and Renaissance Instruments and came across this one.. By far one of the best sounding, but it appears too complicated for me! Haha!
Lovely music!
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Delightful!
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Isn't that a bodhran, not a tabor?
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That was awesome...my first time seeing someone play the pipe and tabor. Great job!
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Very nice performance. Clean, in tune, and very well rhythm-ed.
(By the way, I would love to learn to play the pipe and tabor but my neighbors would kill me).
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thanks for that info - shall investigate
mayhillgurdy 5 months ago
It is a tabor, played in Europe for centuries. It has two skins and a snare and is played with one drumstick on the snare side . A bodhran is a relatively modern invention and only has one skin, no snare, and is played with a short double headed beater.
mayhillgurdy 1 year ago
This tune sounds very similar to the "lillibulero" tune.
LutzDerLurch 2 years ago
Maybe because both come from Playford's Dancing Master - Grimstock is in the first edition of 1651 and LilliBurlero is in the eighth edition of 1690
mayhillgurdy 2 years ago
Great!! Grimstock is the name rigth? really i love that theme, you play with grat passion and sensibilität!! Ich finde es Super!!!
CasiodorodelaTeja 3 years ago
Thanks for your comment. Yes Grimstock is the name of the tune. John Playford published it in a collection of dance tunes in the 17th century. I really enjoy playing it and lots of his other tunes.
Gillian
mayhillgurdy 3 years ago