I'm so glad this is up. I have to dust it off for a memorial next week (yes, it was requested for a memorial) and have been sitting up with Neil Dickie's First Book most of the night. It's great being able to start at 75% playback speed and work your way back to performance tempo.
You nailed that - thank you. First time I heard the tune was in 1989 at a concert given by the St. Thomas Episcopal band here in Houston, Texas, and it was played in a solo-set featuring their teacher and band instructor, world champion piper Michael Cusack. Of course, he nailed it, too. Thanks again!
I'm so glad this is up. I have to dust it off for a memorial next week (yes, it was requested for a memorial) and have been sitting up with Neil Dickie's First Book most of the night. It's great being able to start at 75% playback speed and work your way back to performance tempo.
You nailed that - thank you. First time I heard the tune was in 1989 at a concert given by the St. Thomas Episcopal band here in Houston, Texas, and it was played in a solo-set featuring their teacher and band instructor, world champion piper Michael Cusack. Of course, he nailed it, too. Thanks again!
Brilliant rendition thankyou.
Excellent
I love this. I wish i could play it soon.
Amazing
A cracking tune even if the Rowantree remains my personal favourite!
That and Tracey Bear are mine too
Hi, what is the embellishment in part 5 that sounds like a taorluath, but you do it without a low g in it?
I think you'll mean the dre... like half a crunluath. It's in the music, or should be
Do you have any sheet music for this
Hi there, it's in a couple of books, certainly Scots Guards Book 3