Chris Earl Resigns from Pipe Bands Australia

Resignation letter: ‘Pipe Bands Australia, as with any organisation, should and must always be in the collective best interests of all members. To serve those members in the advancement of aspirations and by giving a voice to the many who prefer making music to attending meetings dictates that individual sacrifices are made of a vocational, personal and financial nature – without hesitation – in honouring the principles and tenets of…

2020 MacGregor Memorial Piobaireachd Result (updated with winning performance)

Campbell WIlson from New Zealand has won the prestigious MacGregor Memorial Piobaireachd competition run by the Highland Society of London and the Argyllshire Gathering. After the judges considered the video submissions, the prize list was as follows: 1 Campbell Wilson2 Henry Pulach3 Ross Conner4 Anna Smart Listen to Campbell’s winning tune here: The finalists and their tunes: Ross Conner (17), Campbeltown, End of the High Bridge. Ross played Lachlan MacNeill Campbell…

Shedding Light on the Rankin Piping Family from the Island of Mull

We know very little of the Rankin family from the island of Mull and mentioned in Angus MacKay’s book as hereditary pipers to the MacLean of Coll ‘from time immemorial’. The most notable was Conn Dauly and he is believed to have been instructed on Skye either by the MacCrimmons or the MacArthurs. MacKay’s book relates the tale of a Rankin playing for Dr Johnston on his tour of the…

SFU Worlds 1995 Video Part 2/ RSPBA on Covid/ Report: Virus Can Travel Five Metres

Kevin Maclean of the Simon University Pipe Band: ‘I just wanted to let you know about Part 2 of our mini-documentary about the band’s 1995 World Championship win. There’s a bit of a write-up as well as all of the videos here.‘ The band is pictured above with their trophies in 1995. The story begins: To commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Simon Fraser University Pipe Band’s first victory at…

The Glorious Effect – A Must Watch Film for All Lovers of Ceòl Mòr

This marvellous short film was produced by the BBC in the early 1980s, and seeks to explain piobaireachd to the wider public. Not only does it do so from a historical perspective, but also from a performer’s, and the examination of the solo scene at the time is masterful. The film is 50 minutes long and there are interviews with many famous characters, and glimpses of others who are now…