Bagpipes & Drums | Saint Patricks Day | Michaels Sports Pub & Grill

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • www.michaelsspo...
    Thanks to everyone who came out to Michaels Sports Pub & Grill for our Saint Patricks Day Celebrations. We'd love it if St Patricks Day was always on a Friday, but it didn't seem to matter, it was a great turn out, with plenty of green beer, Guinness, shots and the necessary Corned Beef & Cabbage.
    So what makes a great St Patricks Day? Music for a start and we were lucky enough to have Vince and his merry band of bag pipers and drummers to entertain us. Bag Pipes sound great, then add the drums, and a great inside location, and the sound and the experience just gets amplified. This is the first of some great videos from the performances throughout the night and we'll get more posted shortly.
    Also, check out all the great photos from the Saint Patricks celebrations at michaelssportsp...

Комментарии • 74

  • @risteardwest3384
    @risteardwest3384 3 года назад +4

    A lot of Scottish songs they play on a bagpipe what are your an Irish or Scottish pipe band it's just the tradition it's been going on for 100 years or more just great music just love going to parades and watching them or a place like Michael's sit there and have a couple drinks some good food to eat and listen to wonderful music it just puts chills through your body
    🍀🇨🇮💯🍀🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿💯👍

  • @adelegreene7259
    @adelegreene7259 3 года назад +1

    This is Awesome....... It reminds me of my childhood 🧤

  • @UrukEngineer
    @UrukEngineer Месяц назад

    St Patrick's Day - but they play "Green Hills of Tyrol". The tune is based on Rossini's 1829 Italian opera William Tell. It was then turned into a song about dying Scottish soldier.

  • @jamiewilson8578
    @jamiewilson8578 3 года назад +1

    Happy St patrick's day blood runs think of Scottish and Irish in me

  • @alanoneill3065
    @alanoneill3065 3 года назад +1

    Scottish songs with traditional females involved
    the new normal...more AUTHENTIC than before

  • @johngarcia6661
    @johngarcia6661 7 лет назад +2

    good tune,i wanted more of blonde in short shorts lol...anyhow Happy St Patrick's day

  • @friofrost09
    @friofrost09 2 года назад

    Rowdy Roddy Piper..... 😢😭😭😭😭

  • @piperbob2
    @piperbob2 3 года назад +1

    They should have played the tunes "St. Patrick's Day" and "Garry Owen".

  • @lanacampbell-moore4549
    @lanacampbell-moore4549 3 года назад +1

    🇮🇪💃☘️

  • @rapiddominace
    @rapiddominace 7 лет назад +7

    It's a Scottish tune though

    • @carlmilton4285
      @carlmilton4285 7 лет назад +1

      Played on a Scottish instruments while wearing Scottish traditional dress.... I do not understand St patricks day in America

    • @cecircinn2908
      @cecircinn2908 4 года назад

      @@carlmilton4285 perhaps it was the "Green hills of Tyrol " name of the tune that confused them ....oh wait that's in Austria which is even further from Ireland

    • @eannnna81
      @eannnna81 3 года назад

      Do realise all this came from kingdom of ulster

    • @MrBagpipes
      @MrBagpipes 10 месяцев назад

      The words to Green Hills were written recently by a Scots man and added to a much older tune. The Italian composer Rossini composed the Green Hills tune itself two hundred years ago. The second half of the tune is based on an Irish song that used pre-existing music composed by English man Matthew Locke.
      It's really interesting how much music can travel especially in the folk genre. So we have some classics in the piping world like Wings where the music is originally German but th Regimental march of The Royal Engineers regiment of The British Army. Rose of Allandale is about a place in northern England where the music is from France and Robin Adair is Irish but played rarely outside of Scottish bands. The Irish song Endearing Young Charms has music which is originally English. The Scottish classic Ae Fond Kiss has music written by an Irish man and the Irish classic song Mo Ghille Mear's music was written by a Scots man. March of The King of Laois was written by a Scot residing in Ireland. Abide with Me is an old English tune with words written by a Scot and Amazing Grace has words written by an Englishman with music much later added in America using a tune that was most likely Scottish in origin.

    • @brucecollins641
      @brucecollins641 6 месяцев назад

      @@MrBagpipes rabbie burns the scottish poet wrote..ae fond kiss .it's thought to have come from rory dall. the melodies different. rory dall was actually scottish. the irish rory dall never existed.a scotsman also wrote the green glens of antrim. molly malone also written by a scotsman as a comic sang.

  • @Sisterlisk
    @Sisterlisk 6 лет назад +1

    bunch of drunks cheering in the background lol

    • @Hooozyer
      @Hooozyer 3 года назад

      future mommies

  • @deereeid1290
    @deereeid1290 2 года назад

    That is Scottish Great Highland Bagpipe, Scottish pipe songs, Scottish sporons, Scottish kilts! Scotland doesn't even celebrate St Patrick day, they celebrate St Andrew day. How offensive that you mix up the two cultures, they are not the same culture, the Scots are British for starters.

    • @martinsacksteder6245
      @martinsacksteder6245 2 года назад

      Perhaps you should look up St. Laurence O’Toole Pipeband or Field Marshals Montgomery Pipeband both out of Ireland winning the world Pipeband championships in Glasgow multiple times or any of the other hundreds of other Irish pipe bands who are all wearing highland gear, playing Scottish/Irish tunes

    • @drrd4127
      @drrd4127 Год назад +2

      @@martinsacksteder6245 I am the person that made that original comment, I have have a new phone, and new RUclips account.
      It is Funny you said that because I am from a small village in central Scotland. I grew up touring Scotland (even went to France) with my dads pipe band, I have been to multiple world championships.
      My dad came from the next town over and guess what! His band won the world championship in 1998 when I was 9 years old, I was there.
      Yes, it is true that bands come from all over the world to the championships but when they come they are not in denial of the fact that they are there to represent and participate in Scottish culture! Even bands from New Zealand and Canada have won but majority of the bands are from Scotland, the music that must be played is Scottish (because there is a tune list that you get judged on) and the side events are Scottish for example Highland dancers!
      We don't oppose foreigners participating in Scottish culture but we don't like it when you get us mixed up with the Irish like we're from the same culture, okay! Especially since we don't celebrate St Patrick's Day.

    • @MrBagpipes
      @MrBagpipes 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@drrd4127Victoria Police from Australia won the World's in 1998 so I'm guessing your da was in a band that won a lesser grade. Still a quality achievement by any standards.
      I've met St. Laurence O'Toole pipe band members numerous times, I can promise you most of them see themselves as representing the tradition of mouth blown pipes in Ireland. Same with the severql very good bands now competing out of Brittany. Haven't seen a Galician band at the Worlds yet but there's a few who could hold their own, a lot of beautiful tunes of their own too. Thankfully though most of us that do actually play tend to leave the nationalist stuff aside, it's all about the music for us.
      Bands that want to compete at the worlds in lower Grades have to pick MAP tunes set by the RSPBA. Understandably the RSPBA pick Scottish tunes for their major competitions. At the much more numerous minor competitions we can play whatever we like. My band's previous competition set for minors had two English tunes in it. 2/4 marches are the quintessential tunes to play on the GHB and few of the technical level required for competitions have ever been composed by non Scots. Terry Tully has done a few that I've seen/heard solo competitors play. I played an Irish tune first time I competed solo for no other reasons than I liked it and felt confident with it. The RSPBA have one Irish Strathspey on their list and more reels.Grade One and Two bands can pick tunes from wherever they like and do. I seen a British Army pipe band from a Scottish regiment compete with a medley in which every tune was Irish, seemed a bit odd at first but a few of the tunes had some much altered settings which sounded really good.
      If you fancy being offended by whatever no problem. Ultimately though both Ireland and Scotland are sparsely inhabited countries on the periphery of Europe and even the most well-being of people are not going to be entirely familiar with every aspect of their culture. I mean, you've even got Scottish folk who don't know their country was named after a bunch of marauding Irishmen and think most Scots are descended from people who wore kilts once upon a time when the opposite is true. Because there is no historical tradition of tartan, kilts and bagpipes in the central belt and lowlands, it's all a relatively recent import from their Gaelic neighbours in the North West. 😉👍😊😂
      Have a good day whatever you're up to.

    • @brucecollins641
      @brucecollins641 6 месяцев назад

      @@MrBagpipes lol, mr bagpipes.....you should do some serious research on these " marauding irishmen".it's a load o made up infantile nonsense. also, scotland was never named after the mythical irish scotti because the irish were never called scotti.

    • @MrBagpipes
      @MrBagpipes 6 месяцев назад

      @@brucecollins641 check you out telling someone to do research whilst being simultaneously offended by facts. That's funny.
      Scotia was a term initially used by Romans to describe Ireland and Scotti was what Romans (at one point) used to call those from Ireland.
      If you can provide an alternative explanation I'm all ears. 😊