Diemazz

Adipose tissue
Burn Notice (TV series)
1977 in aviation
Zaporizhzhia
WTMV
Boot
Rhythm of Life (TV series)
Larry Jaster
560s
intermittent fasting calories
KSDB
WRKR
Mozenrath
Noorvik, Alaska
Controlling interest
Gao Shou
Xiao Baoyin
Springfield, Fife
Pope Benedict II
Emperor Jing of Northern Zhou
alexis amore
SGIS
Category:583 births
F4L
Binaural recording
Hieronymus Fabricius
qsc audio
Stranger Things
Marshall Ledbetter
Image:PentMinor mid
Sampling (music)
Zuheir Mohsen
Emmy (name)
Borneo
ZNF346
Mathematical methods in electronics
KDRF
Isaac Babalola Akinyele
Video games
Janan Sawa
jade raymond
JAM2
WSDZ


The bombarde, or bombard (in Breton) is a folk musical instrument from Brittany and Cornwall that is a cross between an oboe and a conical-bored pipe chanter (the part of the bagpipe upon which the player creates the melody). The bombarde is blown by the mouth; the reed is held between the lips. Typically pitched in B flat, it plays a diatonic scale over two octaves.

Contents

In Breton music

A breton bombard

Producing a very strident and powerful tone, the bombarde is most commonly heard today in bagads, the Breton version of the pipe bands. Traditionally it was used in a duet with the binioù for Breton folk dancing.

The bombarde requires so much breath that a bombard player (talabarder) can rarely play for long periods. This suits Breton music, where there is often a solo line which is then echoed by a chorus: the bombarde plays the solo line and then the player recovers while the other instruments play the echo.

In Cornish music

The bombarde is also a traditional instrument in Cornish folk music. However its use in Cornish music today is much less widespread than in Breton music. Bands such as Dalla and Pyba do use the bombarde, often alongside Cornish bagpipes and drums to produce a sound similar to that of a bagad (pipe band), particularly for a nozow looan (a Celtic-Cornish dance event).

In the pipe organ

The name "Bombarde" is also used for a powerful reed stop in Pipe Organs, often set to be played by the pedals and usually at 16′ pitch, or at 32′ pitch as a Contra Bombarde (French: Contre Bombarde) and occasionally at 8′ pitch. Sometimes organs also have entire divisions of powerful reed stops called "Bombarde", controlled by its own manual.

Films

  • Of Pipers and Wrens (1997). Produced and directed by Gei Zantzinger, in collaboration with Dastum. Lois V. Kuter, ethnomusicological consultant. Devault, Pennsylvania: Constant Spring Productions.

search:

Site Map: RSS 2.0

Recent Searches: Bombarde
Category:Japanese mythology stubs
Binaural recording
File:Oni netsuke front jpg
Yasakani no magatama
QPQ
Binding of Isaac
M98C (paintball)
Kusanagi
Braslav of Pannonia

Related Pages: