• Donald MacPhee, circa 1870s, silver and ivory

    This is one of the most remarkable sets to be exhibited on this site.

    Donald MacPhee lived a brief but significant piping life from 1841 to 1880. He was a seminal piping figure in the 1860s and 1870s as one of the first great non-Gaelic speaking players. Robert Meldrum thought him one of the best players in Scotland, and his playing inspired a teenage John MacColl to save up enough money for a year to move from Oban to Glasgow for lessons from him. He published four important collections of music and ran a very successful bagpipe making business during the 1870s, though examples of his pipes are rare today. When he died at age 38 in 1880, Peter Henderson took over his shop.

    The drones, chanter and blowstick are ebony and appear to be orignal. The combing and beading on the stocks match the pipes, but the stocks themselves don’t all match. The silver pattern on the stocks and mouthpiece bulb roughly match the pipes, but is a deeper cut and is hallmarked Peter Henderson 1951. It appears likely the stock ferrules and bulb and perhaps some of the stocks were made by Henderson as replacements to match the pipes at the time of the hallmark. The chanter is almost certainly the original with its barely visible “D McPHEE” stamped across the top. It is low-pitched but remarkably true.

    The pipes were owned for many years by Hector MacLean, a pupil of Willie MacLean and John MacDonald of Inverness, and a prominent member of the Scottish Pipers’ Association during the 1940s and 1950s.

    The tone is full, but smooth and refined, and the overall visual effect of this set is elegant and distinctive.

     

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