
Chanters are highly recommended for the beginner bagpiper!! Try our
rosewood practice chanter, model CKIT,
our most popular chanter. All EthnicSounds practice chanters are accompanied
with A synthetic practice chanter reed (SWCR).
The practice chanter consists basically of the blowpipe and chanter
from the pipes stuck together to make a wind instrument (i.e., it's
a set of pipes without the bag and without the drones). It comes
apart in the center at the band; the double plastic reed is inside.
Most practice chanters are made of wood and have a plastic mouthpiece.
Some, however, are made entirely of high-grade plastic (these latter
are not necessarily the cheapest ones). Wood is traditional, and
is a favorite material with many pipers; however, it should be noted
that the plastic has certain advantages: it gives a constant tone
whatever the weather, with no expanding, contracting or splitting.
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Practice chanters come mostly in two sizes: standard and long (smaller
chanters for children also exist). The standard practice chanter's
blowpipe and chanter pieces are somewhat shorter than those on a
full-size set of bagpipes, and the distance between the holes is
slightly less; however, this is a convenient size to manage, and
the standard practice chanter is the one played by the majority
of people. It's usually about 18-19 inches long overall.
The long practice chanter's blowpipe and chanter are the same size
as these pieces on a full-size set of bagpipes, and the hole spacings
are the same as well; a long chanter is 21-23 inches long overall,
depending on the brand. People who play the long chanters like the
fact that they feel the same as the pipes. Which size of practice
chanter you will play is entirely up to you; if you have short arms,
you will probably find that a standard chanter works better for
you. If you are tall with long arms, you would be comfortable with
a long chanter.
The woods used in both practice chanters and bagpipes are dense,
hard woods. The best are African blackwood and ebony; cocus (a figured
light beige wood) and rosewood are also used. Note that rosewood
comes in different grades; our cheapest chanters and pipes are made
of an inexpensive type of rosewood, obviously a wood that is in
plentiful supply.
Prices of practice chanters vary a great deal, and here, again,
you must make a choice. Some people feel that they are better to
buy an inexpensive one until they see where they are going on this,
and then get a good one later on. Others figure that if they are
going to play this for the rest of their lives, they might as well
get a good one right up front. As with everything else, you pretty
well get what you pay for in quality, tone, intonation, ability
to stand up to moisture from your breath, long-term durability and
climate changes.
The sole on a practice chanter is the round disk on the end; it is
an optional feature that has nothing to do with playing the chanter.
Chanters that do not have a sole are described as having a button
sole, which is really just a bulge of the wood or plastic of which
the chanter is made. Purists claim that the button sole is the more
traditional style.
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