[NSP] Billy Pigg

2011-06-16 Thread Inky- Adrian
   Fortunately, when I was wanting to play the Union pipes, I ended up at
   DGBs in Longfram. I ended up buying the NSPs. Billy Pigg was the piper
   I went for because he was sympathetic to Irish music, having been
   influenced by Irish musicians and their music,  and Scottish music.
   Pigg also imitated the various pipes of these countries. He wasn't
   interested in tradition. Because of him and various other pipers,
   including me, the NSPs have almost become a mixture of playing styles
   with the proper technique almost being lost. The NSPs are loosing their
   roots and loosing their identity because of lazy, so called players,
   who don't know how to play or can't do it properly because of their
   slow dexterity or their Pigg stupid ideas. I'm saying this because I
   care and it takes a Lancastrian to do it. I've taken to the tradition
   more than most and those who say the NSPs can be played any-old-how are
   the ones ruining the pipes. Why don't you take up an easy instrument to
   play instead of lowering the standard of a fantastic instrument? or
   just stop posting on here.
   The forum, which I made because it was needed, would not tolerate my
   post nor any other postings of this sort becsuse we have one goal:
   Traditional NSPs, their history, playing, etc etc.
   There is no disagreement with us, we are just progressing and
   preserving our NPSs away from those who know little or nothing. So keep
   on Dartmouth, where you can bitch, argue or whatever. Nothing is
   documented or catagorised on here, our forum does this and we are the
   Borg-we are the future.
   --


To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html


[NSP] billy pigg

2009-04-15 Thread what.me
also, I forgot to mention that Tom Clough's method of playing 
was too hard for me to grasp at that time so I opted for Billy Pigg as I 
found it easier to learn. Billy Pigg was used as a big stepping stone. So, 
thanks to Billy Pigg, as I would not be playing in the method that I do 
today.


Adrian 




To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html


[NSP] Billy Pigg

2009-04-14 Thread what.me

Hello all,
Billy Pigg did choyt.
When I was learning the nsp is the late 1970's / early1980's there were not 
too many players which I liked the playing of. I plumped for Billy Pigg 
because he was marketed as being a legend; although Tom Clough was The 
Prince of Pipers, there was not enough of him to listen to. The other 
players seemed to have no gusto in their playing. My method of playing has 
changed. I use to choyte, grace a lot and use vibrato. The first has 
vanished altogether, I use gracing sparingly as with vibrato. Although Billy 
was my mainstay to piping, I've moved on to Clough, although his timing was 
not that accurate, his detatched fingering was the tightest I'd heard early 
in the beginning.
Adrian 




To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html