Leo Rowsome in "Broth of A Boy" (1959)

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  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024

Комментарии • 13

  • @michaelrobshaw4345
    @michaelrobshaw4345 Месяц назад

    One of my favourite pipers.

  • @uilleannaddict
    @uilleannaddict 15 лет назад +2

    Wow! That is so wonderful to see Leo Rowsome on film! What a wonderful piper he was!

  • @markblack2156
    @markblack2156 8 месяцев назад

    The light of heaven to him...master piper

  • @tadhgmulligan
    @tadhgmulligan 3 года назад

    Top class!

  • @deterdettol
    @deterdettol 15 лет назад

    Yep.
    They are masters never to be forgotten.

  • @UISTMAN59
    @UISTMAN59 15 лет назад

    Great playing. '59 was a great year :-)

  • @derabes
    @derabes 5 лет назад

    The star of the show IMHO.

  • @deterdettol
    @deterdettol 15 лет назад +1

    The big 3 uilleann pipers of all time in my opinion:
    Leo Rowsome
    Willie Clancy
    Seamus Ennis

  • @Bodhranbeat
    @Bodhranbeat 12 лет назад

    Christ what a film though
    "thats enough children thank you very much"...

  • @craigmiller1870
    @craigmiller1870 3 года назад

    I might be crazy, but something really weird was going on in this video.

  • @inregionecaecorum
    @inregionecaecorum 15 лет назад

    deterdettol you are not wrong

  • @piobairesicago
    @piobairesicago 11 лет назад

    Plus ca change...out of tune Highland pipe bands being miscast as "Irish," and dancers who can't dance to the tune as played by a live musician...and ignorant #$%^& being so smitten with the spectacle they can't hear how things aren't meshing up...typical...typical. Nothing changed in 70 years, except that the dancers have gotten more numerous and pushy.

    • @Dayepipes
      @Dayepipes 9 лет назад

      +Piobairesicago --I suspect all the "pipe bands" we hear from Hollywood in old movies are probably one same band from the LA area. My 1950 Scots Guards recording is very well tuned with easy playing of heavy MSR's. But also remember that before the 60's, Highland high G was formally tuned halfway between minor and major, hence the cross-fingering required in pibroch, and both Highland and uilleanns often used somewhat sharp 4th notes (D on Highland, G on u.p.). It's sad about the dancers, I quit playing for them when contests began providing metronomes and requiring musicians to play to the clock.