You are a man that i can look up to. In Nature interacting with animals playing tunes that sound relaxing to ancient souls. I Love your singing Voice and You look amazing in your Videos. I play bagpipes aswell and you are Inspiring. Best wishes
Thank you for your condolences. Please enjoy all these videos. I am so glad that we will have his videos here to show his grandchildren and ourselves. He will never be forgotten.
I want to be this man when I grow up. He seems like he would be an absolutely incredible granddad and a wonderful father. _Requiescat in Pacem_ Bear the Tinker.
I just found this video and it is so sad to hear he is no longer with us. I have played the Highland pipes and I can say that every piper playing solo has his or her way of playing, it's called Expression. It comes from the Heart, through the fingers and into the instrument. When I played with the band I had to adapt to the band's style, but on my own I played what I felt, slower, faster what ever the mood. No, not everyone plays technically correct but can still sound very good. Technically correct can be very sterile and is for competition where you have to be note perfect. Bear plays from the Heart.
As a student of the GHB, you should have been taught to love the "note-perfect" style... No one wants to hear your weird versions, however clever they may be.
@@giuseppelogiurato5718 and that's the problem with GHB playing today. It has become too rigid and regimented. However, this makes sense, as the GHB is used for a lot of very formal, ceremonial purposes rather than for folk-style musical expression.
Wonderful video. The cat, the wood fire, the lake and the music transported me to a place where I'd like to sit for a while. When I showed this to a friend, she asked me to print out a screen shot to put on her refrigerator. I made two prints and now we each have pictures of you by the lake with your pipes in our apartments here in Seattle. Thanks!
Lovely unique way of playing the instrument! The sound is sweeter and would make you sit up and listen if you heard it unlike most of the modern pipers and the tiresome jazzy embellishment sound the are insistent on! Fair dues on you having had your own style i enjoyed it! RIP Bear!
That sounds like a children's story, in a wonderful and poetic sense.There is a children's poem called "The Magic Wood", I think that's the title.Its scary but part of it sounds similar to this tale(He taught me to make an apple pie with a horseshoe).
I figure cats-like dogs-have sensitive ears. I used to practise my oboe in h.s.for band and our dog Smokey wouldn't even stay in the same room with me.
Fun playing it looks like you had :-) I was wondering, it looked like you nestled the bottom of the chanter in with the drones. I believe that means when you sounded the low note, D probably, it was always an open D, is that right?
Cracking music considering the technique! A lot of obvious skill from his playing here but unfortunately he's playing the instrument wrong! A lot of possibility for amazing playing if only he put the chanter (stick) down on his lap to play!
B Leger Loveland He has the chanter (playing stick) resting on the drones. Uilleann pipes were originally pastoral pipes which could be played with bears style but uilleann pipes like the one bear is playing had part of the chanter (playing stick) removed so to play them you have to create a seal at the bottom of the chanter (playing stick) by resting it on your tigh , otherwise you end up playing them like Highland bagpipes and not for their intended purpose 🖒😊 hope the info was useful
Alas, Bear the Tinker passed away a few years back so he will never benefit from your obvious expertise. :( Saw him play live sitting around a campfire when I was a wee lad. I don't care if he was playing an instrument wrong. That night was magic.
@@fullstrutn It isn't good practice to play every note off of the leg. This tends to make the notes sound in a flatter pitch. Especially in the second octave, it's better to have the chanter on the leg due to the way the air flows. You will notice that all throughout this video, Bear never plays any notes in the upper octave; he stayed in the lower octave the whole time. So he was only using the Uilleann chanter to half of its potential.
You are a man that i can look up to. In Nature interacting with animals playing tunes that sound relaxing to ancient souls. I Love your singing Voice and You look amazing in your Videos. I play bagpipes aswell and you are Inspiring. Best wishes
Thank you for your condolences. Please enjoy all these videos. I am so glad that we will have his videos here to show his grandchildren and ourselves. He will never be forgotten.
Very sad to hear Bear passed on, I just discovered his videos and he was such an amazing person. What a beautiful talented resourceful soul.
This guy lived it right. Long live the spirit of the Tinker.
I wished I had known this man for he lived the life of a Tinkerman, simple, honest and with great passion. RIP you will be sadly missed.
I want to be this man when I grow up. He seems like he would be an absolutely incredible granddad and a wonderful father. _Requiescat in Pacem_ Bear the Tinker.
Perfect environment.
Perfect instrument.
Perfect sound.
Sad that to hear. He was great on them Irish type pipes.and looked a great old fellow to get on with. RIP
I just found this video and it is so sad to hear he is no longer with us. I have played the Highland pipes and I can say that every piper playing solo has his or her way of playing, it's called Expression. It comes from the Heart, through the fingers and into the instrument. When I played with the band I had to adapt to the band's style, but on my own I played what I felt, slower, faster what ever the mood. No, not everyone plays technically correct but can still sound very good. Technically correct can be very sterile and is for competition where you have to be note perfect. Bear plays from the Heart.
As a student of the GHB, you should have been taught to love the "note-perfect" style... No one wants to hear your weird versions, however clever they may be.
@@giuseppelogiurato5718 and that's the problem with GHB playing today. It has become too rigid and regimented. However, this makes sense, as the GHB is used for a lot of very formal, ceremonial purposes rather than for folk-style musical expression.
May your afterlife be blessed with lots of music......
no i love this wonderful musician and god bless him for keeping the celtic tradition. thank you for this video
Wonderful video. The cat, the wood fire, the lake and the music transported me to a place where I'd like to sit for a while. When I showed this to a friend, she asked me to print out a screen shot to put on her refrigerator. I made two prints and now we each have pictures of you by the lake with your pipes in our apartments here in Seattle. Thanks!
That is beautiful, and I'm inspired to do the same... his spirit and music live on
So sorry to hear he passed away. Rest in peace good man ❤
Beautiful. Gave me goosebumps. Subscribed
Lovely unique way of playing the instrument! The sound is sweeter and would make you sit up and listen if you heard it unlike most of the modern pipers and the tiresome jazzy embellishment sound the are insistent on! Fair dues on you having had your own style i enjoyed it! RIP Bear!
Great
You have a new follower
🇪🇸👍🇨🇮
RIP my good man
Like a Druid of old, his cat reminded me of my old cat Merle.
Wow. What a Legend.
Great !!!!
Love it!
Very sad to say that Bear The Tinker has passed away on Sept. 1 at 9pm, RIP my friend
Sorry for your loss, seemed like an awesome guy
Just discovering this video, from France, and sad to read the bad news... this guy seemed to be a "good" person !
He died from Cancer.
He gave us beautiful music! RIP.
no exercise
sorry to hear about his passing :( we used to shoot muskets together, he taught me to make an apple pie over a campfire using a horse shoe
That sounds like a children's story, in a wonderful and poetic sense.There is a children's poem called "The Magic Wood", I think that's the title.Its scary but part of it sounds similar to this tale(He taught me to make an apple pie with a horseshoe).
Hopently he enjoy the eternal jamsession....
Miss being around...
Lovin it
Does anybody know the names of the tunes he is playing? Did he compose them himself?
the cat ran away as soon as he heard the billow pumped
I figure cats-like dogs-have sensitive ears. I used to practise my oboe in h.s.for band and our dog Smokey wouldn't even stay in the same room with me.
I want that pipe for Christmas
How does he manage to jump between octaves with the chanter's butt between the drones?
Those are Irish Uilleann pipes he's playing.
RIP bear
Rip Bear.
cool
What kind of pipe is this? It's absolutely gorgeous.
Also, cool kitty. :3
It is a version of the Irish "Uilleann pipes," made by David Daye.
Fun playing it looks like you had :-) I was wondering, it looked like you nestled the bottom of the chanter in with the drones. I believe that means when you sounded the low note, D probably, it was always an open D, is that right?
The low D note always has to be played off the leg.
did you intend to put the end of the chanter between the drones?
He's unable to answer your question; he passed away several years ago.
Cracking music considering the technique! A lot of obvious skill from his playing here but unfortunately he's playing the instrument wrong! A lot of possibility for amazing playing if only he put the chanter (stick) down on his lap to play!
Brian Crehan well thank you for the technicallity. but he does have it on his lap.....
B Leger Loveland He has the chanter (playing stick) resting on the drones. Uilleann pipes were originally pastoral pipes which could be played with bears style but uilleann pipes like the one bear is playing had part of the chanter (playing stick) removed so to play them you have to create a seal at the bottom of the chanter (playing stick) by resting it on your tigh , otherwise you end up playing them like Highland bagpipes and not for their intended purpose 🖒😊 hope the info was useful
Alas, Bear the Tinker passed away a few years back so he will never benefit from your obvious expertise. :(
Saw him play live sitting around a campfire when I was a wee lad. I don't care if he was playing an instrument wrong. That night was magic.
even in Davy Spillanes book it shows fingering for uillean pipes off the leg nobody needs to tell you of HIS reputation
@@fullstrutn It isn't good practice to play every note off of the leg. This tends to make the notes sound in a flatter pitch. Especially in the second octave, it's better to have the chanter on the leg due to the way the air flows. You will notice that all throughout this video, Bear never plays any notes in the upper octave; he stayed in the lower octave the whole time. So he was only using the Uilleann chanter to half of its potential.
its out of tune