
Bagpipes have been documented in Wales since at least the 12th century. The Welsh Laws of Hywel Dda, in the 10th century and later versions in the 12th and 13th centuries provide information about the status of music in Wales. The Law states that the king should recognise the status of master craftsmen in his service by giving each one an appropriate instrument, specified as harp, crwth, or pipes. A Christmas feast was held by the Lord Rhys at Cardigan in 1176, in the form of an eisteddfod, as we know it today.
“At Christmas in that year, the Lord Rhys ap Gruffudd held court in splendour at Cardigan, in the castle. And he set two kinds of contest there: one between bards and poets, another between harpists and crwthers and pipers and various classes of music-craft. And he had two chairs set for the victors.”
But, with the general decline of Welsh traditional music in the 19th century, the pipes disappeared from use. There are no definite surviving examples of bagpipes that were used in Wales, but there are drawings and carvings that show a style of bagpipe very similar to those used in Brittany and Galicia, sometimes referred to as the ‘Atlantic Bagpipe’. There is also a description from Anglesey of what could be a bagpipe played by herdsmen, with a cow horn attached to the chanter, probably a pibgorn with a bag.
The Welsh Pipes & Pibgorn
Images from Trac Cymru Tune Chain Series
In the last 40 or so years there has been a revival of piping in Wales. A repertoire of Welsh piping tunes has been rediscovered and developed, along with the instruments, based on pipes from Brittany and Galicia, as well as using pipes from those regions.
The Pibgorn is the Welsh hornpipe. The chanter has a cow horn mouth piece to protect the reed and a cowhorn bell to amplify the sound. There’s a single reed, usually made of cane or synthetic material and there are a number of surviving examples dating from the 18th and 19th centuries. The pibgorn is probably the forerunner to the bagpipe and it’s likely that a bag was attached to the chanter to make playing easier as description from Anglesey above. This is called the Pibau corn/cyrn, or the horn pipes. It’s a mouthblown bagpipe with a single reed chanter, a horn to amplify the sound, and a bass drone. Gafin Morgan is currently developing a totally synthetic pibgorn for beginners, children, for use in school etc; and istrument maker Gerard KilBride has developed a website which shows how to make your own elder-wood pibgorn, at https://pibgyrn.gerardkilbride.com/
On the weekend of June 22-24th 2012, the first Pibgorn Festival took place in Pontsticill, Merthyr Tydfil – Gwyl Pibgyrn Pontsticill, organised by Gerard KilBride and local pipers Gafin Morgan and Antwn Owen-Hicks with volunteers from Bagad Pibau Morgannwg. We hope that festival will be held again at some point!
Thanks to Antwn Owen Hicks and Gafin Morgan for the information.
Below are some more quotes from various historical sources about bagpipes and piping in Wales, as well as two videos featuring Gafin Morgan playing the pibgorn and the Welsh pipes as part of our project Tune Chain!