Countries
Thesaurus
Terminology
Contact

Throw

gracing technique (in order of complexity / frequency): c1

No identical types known (yet).

From a¹ upwards: 3 consecutive gracenotes: g¹, d² and c²; From g¹ only 2 (d² and c²); With d² [invariably?] as the target note it results in:

g¹-d²-c²-d²; a¹-g¹-d²-c²-d²; b¹-g¹-d²-c²-d²; c²-g¹-d²-c²-d²; d²-g¹-d² ⇢c²-d²; e²-g¹-d²-c²-d²; f²-g¹-d²-c²-d²; g²-g¹-d²-c²-d²; a²-g¹-d²-c²-d².
NB: Example(s) to be replaced with staff-notation.


Sources

Logan, [?]: Complete tutor for the Highland bagpipe [London, [1936?]]. Entirely revised by captain John MacLellan… London, s.a. [ca. 1980], p.XIII.

Web

Throw (College of Piping tutor [video])