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*[http://www.sussexbrew.freeuk.com/intropt.htm A Plain and Easy Introduction to the English Pipe and Tabor]
*[http://www.sussexbrew.freeuk.com/intropt.htm A Plain and Easy Introduction to the English Pipe and Tabor]
*[http://chrisbrady.itgo.com/pipntab/pipntab.htm Address to a Society of Morris Dancers, 1914] by Sir Francis Darwin
*[http://chrisbrady.itgo.com/pipntab/pipntab.htm Address to a Society of Morris Dancers, 1914] by Sir Francis Darwin
*[http://www.tamborileros.com/pdf/tamboril%20y%20flauta%20-%20iniciacion%20a%20la%20practica%20instrumental.pdf Introductory Method for Tamborilero's Pipe] (in Spanish)
*http://www.tamborileros.com (in Spanish)
*[http://www.es-aqui.com/payno/arti/flauta3.htm Construction of 3-hole pipe] (in Spanish)
*http://www.txistulari.com (in Basque)


{{commonscat|Pipe and tabor}}
{{commonscat|Pipe and tabor}}

Revision as of 02:39, 9 September 2007

Three-hole pipe
Classification
Playing range
1-2 octaves
Related instruments

The three-hole pipe, also commonly known as tabor pipe is a wind instrument designed to be played by one hand, leaving the other hand free to play a tabor, bell, psalterium, bones, triangle or other percussive instrument.

The three-hole pipe's origins are not known, but it dates back at least to the 11th Century. [1]

It was popular from an early date in France, the Iberian Peninsula and Great Britain and remains in use there today. [2]

The most common form of tabor pipe in the Basque region is tuned ]tone, semitone, tone. The most common form in Provence is tuned tone, tone, tone. The English tabor pipe is commonly tuned tone, tone, semitone, and corresponds to the three lowest holes of a tinwhistle. [3]

See also

References