|
publication
date November 15th 2008
price £15.00 plus p&p
Buy it Now from
the
Lowland and Border Pipers' Society
sample
pages |
Welcome Home My Dearie tells the story of the bagpipe of the Scottish Lowlands
from its heyday in the late 17th century to its gradual decline in the 19th century.
Once known as ‘the common bagpipe’ but later consigned to museum collections,
displaced by its Great Highland brother, its full history is told here for the first time.

An essential companion work to 'The Day it Daws'
‘Welcome Home My Dearie’ is the name of the
tune Piper James Ritchie played 'with might and
main’, marching in front of a wedding procession
through the town of Peebles in the mid-18th
century. In this second volume of his history of
piping in the Scottish Lowlands, Pete Stewart
presents a vivid picture of life in the Lowland
countryside, in the burgh towns and in Edinburgh,
charting the role of the bagpiper through
a century which saw so many dramatic changes.
Framed between two elegies, one for a piper at
the beginning of the century, loved and mourned,
and one from the end, despised and rejected,
‘Welcome Home My Dearie’ pieces together the
story of the bagpipe in the Lowlands from its
heyday to its decline. It is a detective story too,
using contemporary sources and long-forgotten
images to reclaim history from legend, and like
all good detective stories, it has a twist in the tail.
|
|