The Practice Chanter

What is a practice chanter?

The Practice Chanter is the smaller instrument with which we learn the fingering technique for the notes in order to play tunes for the Great Highland bagpipe.

What are the parts of a practice chanter?

Practice Chanter


The practice chanter is made up of two main sections; the Top Section and the Bottom Section.

The Top section may or may not have a Ferrule (A decorative mount) placed at the lower end, the middle section of the top is the sound chamber and the top third is the mouthpiece into which you blow to make the reed vibrate.

The Bottom section may or may not have a sole plate (A decorative mount) attached to the lower end, the bottom section has all the finger holes along its length, at its top there is a fitted joint consisting of a hemp binding or a rubber O ring, above the fitted joint is the reed seat (A small hole into which the practice reed is placed).

How do you care for a practice chanter?

When you finish playing disassemble the top and bottom sections and carefully and remove the reed. Dry the interior of both sections with a small moisture absorbent brush. or pipe cleaners. Then dry the reed by holding it at the staple end and blow into the staple end in order to blow the moisture out then carefully dry the blades with a clean tissue.

NEVER leave your practice chanter in the sun or in a hot car as the chanter may warp or crack and the reed may melt.







Please Read our Terms and Conditions

For more information: Email us at info@pipeline-bagpipes.com



SSL_Cert PayPal
About Us (Store Hours, Location, Etc)         Sitemap         Back to Previous Page

Privacy Policy         Pipeline Bagpipes - (570) 857-7092