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bagpipe.html
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bagpipe.html
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<!DOCTYPE html>
<head>
<center><h1>Bagpipe</h1>
</head>
<body>
<img src="IMG/music images/bagpipe/1.jpg"
</center>
<br>
<hr class="1">
<p style= "text-align:left">
<br>Bagpipes are a woodwind instrument using enclosed reeds fed from a constant reservoir of air in the form of a bag. The Scottish Great Highland bagpipes are the best known examples in the Anglophone world, but people have played bagpipes for centuries throughout large parts of Europe, Northern Africa, Western Asia, around the Persian Gulf and northern parts of South Asia.
The term bagpipe is equally correct in the singular or the plural, though pipers usually refer to the bagpipes as "the pipes", "a set of pipes" or "a stand of pipes
This is a wind instrument that consists of two or more single- or double-reed pipes.</br>
<br>The reeds are vibrated by wind caused by arm pressure on a skin or cloth bag. The pipes are held in wooden sockets tied into the bag, which is inflated either by the mouth or by bellows strapped to the body. Melodies are played on the finger holes of the melody pipe, or chanter, while the remaining pipes, or drones, sound single notes. Bagpipes existed by c. 100 ce. The early bag was an animal bladder or a nearly whole sheepskin or goatskin. Bagpipes have always been folk instruments. An important related instrument is the Irish union (or uilleann) pipes.</br>
</p>
<form id="contact-form" method="post" action="123.php">
<textarea name="" id="" cols="90" rows="5" placeholder="Add a comment..."></textarea>
<br>
<input type="submit" value="Submit">
</form>
</body>