Have any of you been referred to as pipers, or been told that your piping of a particular tune was good/bad/ect.?
I was wondering, b/c I have been referred to as a piper more than once, and I don’t play the pipes- I play the whistle. Is this a common thing? I was always under the impression that people who played the PIPES were called PIPERS… Not us Irish whistlers…?
I think a lot of people out there aren’t sure what to call our instrument…if they’re not into Irish music, they may never have heard of a whistle. I’ve had mine called both “pipes” and “flutes” (same with my recorders, but more people seem to be familiar with those, probably because they’re so commonly used in school music programs).
Strictly speaking, both are correct…it is a type of pipe, and it is a type of flute. What it isn’t is a bagpipe or a transverse flute. If someone says “nice pipe!” or “I like the way you play the flute,” I just say “thank you.” If they ask what it is, or “what kind of flute is that?” I’ll tell them it’s a whistle, but otherwise I don’t go into it much.
When I play the whistle I am more likely to be referred to as playing a flute than pipes. It probably all depends on what the audience is most familiar with..
Yeah, if someone calls it a pipe/flute, it’s usually because he/she doesn’t know what to really call it.
Like Redwolf said, unless someone asks, it’s not a great idea to tell what it really is because it will most likely increase the ignorance of the culture/tradition/music, etc. People usually take little non-offensive stuff as attacks.
-Ross
[ This Message was edited by: rossmpfc13 on 2002-12-02 15:49 ]
On 2002-12-03 00:59, Redwolf wrote:
I prefer the term I heard a kid use once:
“Mommy, why’s that lady blowing on that tube thing?”
Redwolf (proud tube thing player > > )
In California it’s the only safe course, Redwolf. I only just noticed that whistle isn’t really gender neutral. Why not wherstle, I ask? Perhaps wourstle would be OK, but it’s much more fun to play that funny looking tube thingy isn’t it?
I feel all your pain. But as primarily a wooden flute player, my personal favorite is when somebody walks to me after a gig, takes a look at my Lehart and asks, “So, how long have you been playing the clarinet?”
On 2002-12-03 19:02, Zubivka wrote:
Jamie, don’t bother as long as the comment comes after looking at your instrument, not after hearing it >
Well, see that’s the really disturbing part - this is after the gig…
Considering the fact that I play with “piper fingers” and shouldered up, either we’re dealing with a truly uncultured generation, or I need to talk to M. Lehart about the tone of this flute…