Bagpipers - NYC St. Patrick's Day Parade March 17th, 2011
Музыка
Song: The Minstrel Boy
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The Emerald Society Police Dept.
Song: State of Grace
Pipes & Drums at New York City's St. Patrick's Day Parade, March 17th, 2011
Пікірлер: 159
My dad was in the national bag pipe band here in the USA and went over to Scotland to play in a world competition and he said it was one of the best countries he has visited. Great culture and country side.
no one plays the bagpipes nd wears the kilt ... then thinks of Ireland. they think of Scotland. this is all Scottish, great stuff. quit arguing about who got what from where. its Scottish, not Irish. so finish arguing. Proud Scot here with Irish blood & I am proud of it! :)
By the way, to add to my previous post, the Emerald Society is a fraternal organization for police officers of Irish descent. You hear them play "minstrel boy" and "wearing 'o the green" in this video but they also play "the rowan tree" and "cock 'o the north"...straight from Scotland. Hope this helpful.
I'm Irish, but absolutely love Scotland and the bagpipes. This is fantastic !♡
@MARCUSTESS
15 күн бұрын
Bagpipes are Irish originally
italian and catholic, but proud of the pipes of you're culture! God bless
The name of the tune is called The Minstrel Boy. Our band used to play it in our Irish set when we marched in parades. A definite favorite for a St. Patrick's Day parade.
America, Thank you for this amazing spectacle. Sincerely an Irishman.
@TheCzechLad_
2 ай бұрын
If there’s one think the Americans can do better than anyone else it’s to put on a brilliant show 👏
Those guys are so badass. There's just no discussion really.
Pipers pipin'! Drummers drummin'! Love it!
Bravo. Britain, Scotland, America, Ireland and Commonwealth countries forever! We are allies. Let us respect our traditions and stick together.
The tune is called The Minstrel Boy. A definite favorite to play in a St. Patrick's day parade.
All Bagpipers on St.Patricks Day Parade March Music are the Best
@Travelbarefeet1
7 жыл бұрын
Yes!
Bless you for sharing! I am very proud of our NYPD and a proud Irish girl. I was unable to attend the parade yesterday which I never miss so thank you for showing an honourable moment. 😊
@RomanCatholicAnProud I didnt know that, we learn something new everyday lol. Thanks for sharing that mate :)
1st tune is Minstrel boy, 2nd tune is Wearing of the Green
@11sascarwoodboy well the bagpipes these guys are playing are Scottish, but there are other types of bagpipes e.g. uillieann pipes are from Ireland, the Arabs have their own type of bagpipe. In fact the bagpipes were at 1 time a popular instrument throughout Europe, as well as in much of Asia. The Highland bagpipes are of course Scottish & the modern bagpipe band is an invention of Highland regiments in the British Army (traditionally the bagpipe was a solo instrument). Hope I'm not being boring
Just sharing a tradition that has been adapted by Americans on St. Patrick's Day - this is the NYPD. Hope everyone is open to all forms of cultural expression whether it be mixed through the centuries or not. America is a full melting pot, influenced by all cultures across the globe and celebrated year-round. Thank you to everyone for sharing their views!
@RomanCatholicAnProud you are right, us and the Irish are very similar. although we both have bagpipes yes, but different kinds. I believe the pipes is a Scottish thing although celtic music is done by the pipes, again you are right but when I hear the pipes I only think of Scotland. I respect what your saying though.
Actually there is a native English bagpipe instrument called Northumberland Smallpipes
I am Brazilian and like very much the pipes - we call it in Portuguese "Gaita-de-fole". Is there any mix of scot pipes and brazilian drums (batucada) that you know?
@maximilian5001 I have been living in Ireland for the past 7 and a half years and I have never seen them playing bagpipes, they play the uillean pipe and they don't dress like the scottish. I love Scotland too though :)
Fabulous!
Thank you, @60gunner1 !
One hell of a big pipe band. Yep, Minstrel Boy....followed by Wearning of the Green.
@kevintyrrell9559
4 жыл бұрын
I always knew the second song as "the rising of the moon" but apparently both songs took an older Irish song and borrowed the tune. Both are great though 👍
@Flamorgan Your wrong there. There are more pipe bands in Scotland than anywhere in the whole world. There's about 4 round where I live and I stay in small village
Agreed!!
I got a fever, and the only prescription is MORE BAGPIPES!
what is the name of the first bagpipe musics played?
I am confused, really confused. Is the pipes and kilts here supposed to represent Ireland? If so, I am TOO confused.
Acho muito bonito desfile militar.....
are they playing the orange and the green? In the end I hear some familiar tones that makes me think of this song.
The one in second 40 is "The rising of the moon". I don't know whether what the play before is another song or just an intro the make...
We're all Celts and we can all share the bagpipes. The first song is "The Minstrel Boy" and the second is "The Wearin' of the Green." Love it!
COOL!!!
Very very well done. Far, far too short.
@Travelbarefeet1
5 жыл бұрын
Thank you, Mark!
I don't know about the kilts but the pipes are used in many other countries... I think the Romans spread the instrument so guess how common it should be.
Where did the bag pipes orginate from because most country use them?
The minstrel boy
@Travelbarefeet1
5 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
minstral boy into rising of the moon
anyone play the pipes and know what the name of this song is? they NYPD pipers seem to play this one a lot.
Of British Countries I'd say, they are more of Commonwealth military tradition
Erin go bragh !
@Greenforestairsoft
5 жыл бұрын
Erin go brá****
State of Grace
@Travelbarefeet1
5 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the song title!!
does anyone here play the pipes and know the name of this song that the NYPD pipers are playing?
what is the title of this piece
minstral boy
The should have used the irish pipes (uilleann pipes) rather than the great highland pipes which are scottish. Im scottish so im happy :)
I'm pretty sure they are playing "Forever Aye, Forever I will hoist the Union Jack" Correct me if I'm wrong but I am certain(:
Your username tells a story. im a rangers fan too :)
@jonathansmith3825
3 жыл бұрын
So am I am a true blue nose
i know this song, "Minstrel Boy"
which Scottish regiment are they from?
@hayesy5619
5 жыл бұрын
That's the thing. They're not.
@LuisSilva-xm8qm
5 жыл бұрын
New York police department
@duncancallum
5 жыл бұрын
Spot on Alex.
♥♥♥♥♥
Entusiasmante
Até o EB vai usar gaita de fole, foram treinados pelos fuzileiros navais.
What song is this?
Scottish Great Highland Bgpipes originate from the Middle-East, Roman soldiers introduced pipes into the southern part of Britain from which British bagpipes such as Lancashire Greatpipes, Leicestershire Smallpipes, Border Bagpipes etc. originate. It was from Border Bagpipes that the Great Highland Bagpipe evolved. The Romans never reached Ireland and did not export their culture there. Great Highland Bagpipes are Scottish no ifs or buts about it.
@ricemango7502
3 жыл бұрын
actually prior to the modern irish pipes the uilleann pipes, or pipes of the elbow which originate sometime during the 1800s the main irish pipes were the great irish warpipes which are almost identical to the highland pipes, they fell out of use after they were banned by the british, you also have to remember that the scottish highlanders didnt exist when the romans were around and therefore didnt get them from the romans. the modern highlanders are descendants of irish settlers who emigrated to britian in the 700s hundreds of years after west rome fell, thats the reason that scottish gaelic and irish are so similar, they both came from old irish settlers who spoke old irish.
@cecircinn2908
3 жыл бұрын
Where did you get these ideas about Highlanders from ? They are well off the mark . I have seen similar by those desperate to claim Scottish culture as really Irish ( not normally a claim by made by our lovely neighbours the actual Irish Both countries have fantastic culture,history and traditions and should be celebrated. I get the idea that there are a lot of people celebrating their "Irishness" on St Patricks day with their tartan kilts , listening to pipe bands with GHB pipes ,singing mairi's wedding, westering home, parting glass, etc and when they realise these are all Scottish ..panic.. and try to claim them all as Irish. All a bit ironic as Patrick himself was either from what is now Scotland ,England or Wales and not Ireland whilst our St Columba was actually from Ireland
@ricemango7502
3 жыл бұрын
@@cecircinn2908 I never said that Scotland didn't have a rich culture and history, but everything I said was true, Gaelic culture was brought to Scotland via dál riata, an Irish kingdom, the Celts who lived there before were replaced by them, I agree people especially in America mix up the cultures and there is no doubt kilts, tartans and the Highland pipes are Scottish but they all have origins with Irish clothing and instruments, that is a fact not an opinion.
@cecircinn2908
3 жыл бұрын
@@ricemango7502 When Alba was formed with the amalgamation of peoples the King was still called "King of Picts" for 4 or 5 generations then when the Strathclyde Britons amalgamated to form a larger unified country the King became "King of Scots". not much replacement of the existing Celts there . There are Roman marching camps all over Scotland and pipes existed in middle east and Rome long before Scotland and Ireland. Their spread can be charted (by existence of local pipes ) over roman occupied Europe including Northumbria ( where they are still well established ) within earshot of hadrians wall. Kilts developed in Scotland (this is well established ) and tartans development probably has more to do with earlier Pictish /Britonic Celtic people and Norse influence (where there is evidence of checked clothing ). The Irish adopted the scottish kilt from around 1900's to bolster a national identity part of a gaelic revival, preferring it to the irish léine. They kept the plain (traditional ) saffron colour rather than also adopt the Scottish tartan The saffron or yellow colour seen in Irish leine was also seen in Scotland but this was simply the easiest of colours to dye clothes . The yellow dye effectively being from horse urine ...pretty universal ....unless you are going to tell me that the Irish also invented the horse next !
@ricemango7502
3 жыл бұрын
@@cecircinn2908 Why are you getting so pissy because cultural exchange exists lmao, sure pipes existed in scotland before the gaelic settlers from dál riata but the highland pipe is, no matter what your feelings want, a descendant of the irish war pipe, idk why youre so disgusted by this, and for the record title means nothing, the irish high king brian boru had the title, king of the scoti as the scoti is the latin name for the irish. cop on you absolute buffoon, everything i have said is true and youre not impressing anybody by getting butthurt over historical facts.
the bag pipe is not from the UK it's actually rooted in the middle east !
what's a Sporran?
St Patrick's Day? Kitted and dressed in full Scottish highland uniform? 😂🤣😅😆
@sealstorm1935
4 жыл бұрын
Irish and Scottish share near the same celtic heiritage and culture when it comes to song, intruments and dance.
pretty sure tartan and bagpipes are Scottish.
The Scottish and the Irish both share Celtic heritage and Irish play bagpipes as well.
Name of song?
@ctr052
9 жыл бұрын
Sounds like "Ta Mo Chleamhnas Deanta" (My Match It Is Made)
@stewartkeith1544
9 жыл бұрын
The Minstrel Boy and The Wearing 'O the Green.
@KEVINSEPTEMBER
9 жыл бұрын
Stewart Nevling Thanks!
@KEVINSEPTEMBER
9 жыл бұрын
Scott Coleman Not even close
@ctr052
9 жыл бұрын
0wetduck0 The beginning of each song sounded similar to one another.
I Thought It’s Was 2010
They are. Ireland adopted many Scottish customs in the 19th century though to use what they termed at the time as 'Celtic Unity' - a political movement. It's mainly a load of rubbish though that the Americans have copied and adopted as fact. Hence the confusion.
Why is it that "Irish" pipe bands in the U.S. always dress themselves in uniforms based on the uniforms designed by the British Army for their Highland regiments instead of Irish patterns ?
@fredgreene2903
8 жыл бұрын
+memikell because they're subservient.
@dubhslaine2
6 жыл бұрын
Not always.
and kilts
Mutton dressed as lamb.
Check out Young Bagpiper Jacob Loughlin on KZread
@AthCliath23 No it doesn't.
... St. Patrick's actual birthplace is a mystery. We know he is of Roman decent (Patrick as a surname signifies that) Also it's not that reason for tartans and such. 1800's Irish emigration to America, even today there is a strong Irish connection. Many Americans say they are of Irish decent, thus why presidents go there and create events like this. If you want to believe an animated film be my guest + Irish republic have used tartans and pipes (Even Scottish ones) from around 18th century.
Boa, COMANDOS
Ireland has been associated with the kilts, pipes and drums in much the same way as England herself has. This is because in the 17 and 18 hundreds Ireland, Scotland and whales where all a part of the United Kingdom, the great British isles. Through this era the Red Empire marched into battle to the sound of pipes, be they Scottish, English or indeed Irish. As such, though pipes and kilts are Scot by heritage, the Irish Guard, Royal Coldstream and Scot Guard all march to the sound of Scotland.
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the parade should be done with Uillean pipes, not great HIGHLAND SCOTTISH pipes haha
There are so many misconceptions surrounding the pipes and the NYPD. Here it is: before the American civil war there were many in the NYPD of Scots descent (and still are). After the war, Irish immigrants were numerous in their ranks. Some old country traditions from Ireland were grafted onto the traditions of the Scots serving with them. In time, many of these traditions were not seen as exclusively "Celtic", simply "NYPD" (I garuntee there's an Italian in there somewhere playing the pipes)
Help USA SOS internet connection to make sure you everybody else you need to be in touch with me,help criminals awayto jail's
Take care the door here alibes hemorrhagie internere hahaha, ,
so bagpipes are Scottish not Irish smh
@ricemango7502
4 жыл бұрын
No they're Gaelic, they were used by both the Irish and the scottish.
@italianlawyer6308
4 жыл бұрын
@@ricemango7502 OK, but the kilt?
@ricemango7502
4 жыл бұрын
@@italianlawyer6308 The kilt is also Gaelic. The modern Scottish Gaelic people are descendants of Irish settlers that migrated across the Irish sea, so the cultures have a lot in common. The Irish also wore kilts. The difference between Irish kilts and Scottish kilts is that Scottish kilts have a tartan design while Irish kilts are a flat colour like the ones seen here.
@italianlawyer6308
4 жыл бұрын
@@ricemango7502 in wiki I'read: "Though the origins of the Irish kilt continue to be a subject of debate, current evidence suggests that kilts originated in the Scottish Highlands and Isles and were worn by Irish nationalists from at least 1850s onwards and then cemented from the early 1900s as a symbol of Gaelic identity.[16]".
@angusmackenzie6864
4 жыл бұрын
@@italianlawyer6308 Even the word Kilt is derived from an old Scots word no Gaelic language connotations
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Well your language is identical to English, the highland scots language is identical to Irish.
@ALBA-js3um
6 жыл бұрын
Mark Farren wrong. There's a difference.
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I love the fact that Scottish and Irish share a heritage, well the highland scots anyway the lowlanders are just English in my opinion. Scots gaelic and Irish gaelic is identical.
'Hiberni' is Latin for Irish, not 'Scotti'. The Hiberni were different from the Scotti.
This isn't American culture, and even then it isn't even Irish either, it's Scottish.
Where the Scotland flags?? Why Irish? Americans got it wrong again :(
@rsmyth75
8 жыл бұрын
ask any British soldier who they want leading them into battle and they will tell you the Irish bagpipers
@scottishgirl8259
6 жыл бұрын
Tartan Day April 7. Plenty of Scotland fer ya then.
Scottish and Irish are the same peoples, well the highlanders anyway. The lowland scots are just English.
@lizgraham9986
5 жыл бұрын
The highlanders were Picts/Caledonii/Viking. The westerners were scotii (Irish). The low landers of Scotland make something like 80% of the total population. You are trying to say that most of the Scottish population aren't Scottish. Try telling a Scot that.
@dvrn86
5 жыл бұрын
Lowland scots are just English that like the cold. More Germanic than Celtic.
@angusmackenzie6864
5 жыл бұрын
@@lizgraham9986 The Scotti were a bit of a myth there was a sea kingdom stretching between Scotland and Ireland but the Scotti were not Irish it was a generic name for Gaelic speakers from either Scotland or Ireland, a name given by the Romans. The convention of Druim Cett in AD 575 also suggested that Scottish Dál Riata /Scotti dominated the Antrim settlement rather than the other way around.
@brucecollins4729
3 жыл бұрын
@@lizgraham9986 look up the origins of scots and irish gaels on irish origenes for a more realistic account.
Saint Pats Day? The only place you would see tartan kilts and bagpipes in Ireland, would on days like the celebration of the Battle of the Boyne in Northern Ireland where Unionist Orangemen march through the streets of Belfast & Derry. Never would you see that in the Republic of Ireland. The real Irish must be laughing their socks off!
@jamegumbsmigraines.3501
8 жыл бұрын
Your completely wrong,Who do you think the Scottish are? They are an offshoot of the Gaelic Irish Read a history book you pleb.
@johnnyjoejoe1
7 жыл бұрын
There's a place called Scotland where the kilts and the bag pipes are from
@duncancallum
5 жыл бұрын
Funny DNA says im from a people called the PICTS and guess what i was born in Scotland so i aint a Paddy. and the Picts history goes a long long way back . @@jamegumbsmigraines.3501
that makes me sick I don't see a any one holding a Scottish flag only an Irish one! what is the bullshit
@boldbhoy67
5 жыл бұрын
Ehhh.... St Patrick's day. That's a clue for ye...
Everything you just said is wrong... St.Patrick was of English origin, and all of this "Scottish culture" you are referring to is actually Gaelic origins, and the reason it is more evident in Scottish culture is because it was outlawed and suppressed by the English occupation of Ireland.
@hayesy5619
5 жыл бұрын
You're wrong too. Paddy and his family were Welsh.
A beautiful country built by immigrants!
@Travelbarefeet1
6 жыл бұрын
YES!!
Do not know why these guys imitate others and do not do anything original!! The bagpipes are instruments of celebration and military events of European countries. Okay, USA is a multicultural country, but they should root for new ways to express the new identity ... is my opinion. Do not get me wrong.
Scottish is the medieval Latin for Irish. The Irish, the Scotti, gave their name and their language, Gaelic, to Scotland. The bagpipes (uileann pipes) are as Irish as they are Scottish (both mean the same), as is the kilt. The fact that Lowland Scots speaking Saxons have tried to appropriate Highland Gaelic/Irish dress, music and culture, which they once derided as "Erse", is more laughable than anything Irish Americans might do. Learn your history before criticizing others next time.
The name of the tune is called The Minstrel Boy. Our band used to play it in our Irish set when we marched in parades. A definite favorite for a St. Patrick's Day parade.
The tune is called The Minstrel Boy. A definite favorite to play in a St. Patrick's day parade.
The name of the tune is called The Minstrel Boy. Our band used to play it in our Irish set when we marched in parades. A definite favorite for a St. Patrick's Day parade.
The name of the tune is called The Minstrel Boy. Our band used to play it in our Irish set when we marched in parades. A definite favorite for a St. Patrick's Day parade.