Record

Stock and Horn tune, Far O'er Bogie, played by Charles Foster (audio clip)

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Postcard of Stock and Horn tune, Far O'er Bogie, played by Charles Foster (audio clip).
000-000-580-065-C
© National Museums Scotland

Stock and Horn tune, Far O'er Bogie, played by Charles Foster (audio clip)

An early type of pipe, or hornpipe, by tradition played in Scotland up to the 18th Century. Instruments were made of a variety of materials, including bone, sycamore, boxwood and, most commonly, hollowed branch of elder, known as bourtree. Horns attached to the reed pipe were commonly made of goat or cow horn. The Stock and Horn is mentioned as a characteristic folk instrument in literature of the late Medieval period.

This is a mouth-blown reed instrument with similarities to the bagpipe chanter. The tune being played is the North-East song melody Far O'er Bogie. In the guise of the 'shepherd's pipe' the instrument features in pastoral dramas of the early 18th Century, such as Allan Ramsay's Gentle Shepherd of 1725.


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Online ID: 000-000-580-065-C
Image Rights Holder: National Museums Scotland
Project: 0869: The Bagpipe Collection
Project description | View all records in project
Ref: National Museums Scotland  Sound Asset.6
Date:
Material:
Dimensions:
What: Stock and Horn tune
Subject:
Who: Allan Ramsay
Charles Foster (performer)
Where:
Event:
Description: Stock and Horn tune, Far O'er Bogie, played by Charles Foster.
References:
Translations:
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