The Yorkshire bagpipe is a type of bagpipe once native to the county of Yorkshire in northern England. The instrument is currently extinct, but sources as early as 1885 describe it as being familiar in Shakespeare's time.[1]
Modern researcher Kathleen Scott notes that the instrument was often likened to sows, but not based on its sound.[2]
References
- ↑ JJohn Ogilvie, editor Charles Annandale. The Imperial Dictionary of the English Language: a complete encyclopedic lexicon, literary, scientific, and technological. Blackie & Son, 1882. Pg. 203
- ↑ Schmidt, Gary D. (April 1992). "?Vides festinare pastores: The medieval artistic vision of shepherding and the manipulation of cultural expectation in the Secunda pastorum". Neophilologus. 76 (2): 290–304. doi:10.1007/BF00210177.
Further reading
- The Bagpipe in Northern England. R. D. Cannon. Folk Music Journal, Vol. 2, No. 2 (1971), pp. 127-147
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