The earliest bagpipe tunes from Northumberland, or indeed from anywhere in the British Isles, are found in
William Dixon's manuscript from the 1730s. Some of these can be played on
Border pipes or an open-ended smallpipe like the modern
Scottish smallpipes, but about half the tunes have a single octave range and sound well on the single-octave, simple, keyless Northumbrian pipe chanter. These tunes are almost all extended variation sets on dance tunes in various rhythms – reels, jigs, compound triple-time tunes (now known as slip jigs), and triple-time hornpipes. At the beginning of the 19th century the first collection specifically for Northumbrian smallpipes was published,
John Peacock's
Favorite Collection. Peacock was the last of the Newcastle
Waits (musical watchmen), and probably the first smallpiper to play a keyed chanter. The collection contains a mixture of simple dance tunes, and extended variation sets. The variation sets, such as
Cut and Dry Dolly are all for the single octave keyless chanter, but the dance tunes are often adaptations of fiddle tunes – many of these are Scottish, such as "
Money Musk". A pupil of Peacock,
Robert Bewick, the son of
Thomas Bewick the engraver, left five manuscript notebooks of pipetunes; these, dated between 1832 and 1843, are from the earliest decades in which keyed chanters were common, and they give a good early picture of the repertoire of a piper at this stage in the modern instrument's development. Roughly contemporary with this is Lionel Winship's manuscript, dated 1833, which has been made available in facsimile on ; it contains copies of the Peacock tunes, together with Scottish, Irish, and ballroom dance tunes. Both these sources include tunes in E minor, showing the d sharp key was available by this date. The
Northumbrian Minstrelsy, published in 1882, aimed to serve as a historical repository of Northeastern folk songs and pipe music, covering an area from Durham City to just north of the Scottish border. The book is divided into two sections: the first section presents the lyrics (accompanied by some music) of local, now-historical songs, while the second part provides the music for many Northumbrian smallpipe tunes, with very few lyrics. The Minstrelsey drew upon a number of antecedent sources, including Joseph Ritson's Bishopric Garland and Northumberland Garland, John Bell's Rhymes of Northern Bards, and Joseph Crawhall II's Tunes for the Northumbrian Small Pipes. As keyed chanters became more common, adaptations of fiddle music to be playable on smallpipes became more feasible, and common-time hornpipes such as those of the fiddler
James Hill became a more significant part of the repertoire.
The High Level is one. Many dance tunes in idioms similar to fiddle tunes have been composed by pipers specifically for their own instrument –
The Barrington Hornpipe, by
Thomas Todd, written in the late 19th century, is typical. Borrowing from other traditions and instruments has continued – in the early-to-mid 20th century,
Billy Pigg, and Jack Armstrong (The
Duke of Northumberland's Piper) for instance, adapted many tunes from the Scottish and Irish pipe and fiddle repertoires to smallpipes, as well as composing tunes in various styles for the instrument. Although many pipers now play predominantly dance tunes and some slow airs nowadays, extended variation sets have continued to form an important part of the repertoire.
Tom Clough's manuscripts contain many of these, some being variants of those in Peacock's collection. Other variation sets were composed by Clough, such as those for
Nae Guid Luck Aboot the Hoose which uses the extended range of a keyed chanter.
Modern orchestral pieces for the smallpipes Primarily known as a virtuoso player of the
English concertina,
Alistair Anderson also plays Northumbrian smallpipes and has composed many tunes on and for the instrument. His compositions for groups of instruments have explored a greater range of harmonies than was traditionally associated with the smallpipes' repertoire, and he has collaborated with musicians such as jazz trombonist
Annie Whitehead as well as writing the
Shivering Stone suite which he performed with the
Lindsay String Quartet.
Kathryn Tickell (a protégée of Anderson's in her youth) has composed many virtuoso pieces for the smallpipes and has explored an even wider range of collaborations; besides
The Chieftains and
The Boys of the Lough, she has worked with the
Penguin Café Orchestra, percussionist
Evelyn Glennie, jazz saxophonist
Andy Sheppard and
Sting, as well as having had a modern classical piece,
Kettletoft Inn, composed for her by
Sir Peter Maxwell Davies. In 2008 she composed a suite for the
BBC Promenade Concerts for the
London Sinfonietta,
Muzsikas and
Folkestra. More recently, Tickell has collaborated with pianist
Joanna MacGregor and the
Nash Ensemble, playing new compositions based on traditional Northumbrian tunes by
Howard Skempton, Peter Maxwell Davies and
Michael Finnissy. ==Playing style==