uilleann piper
English
    
    Etymology
    
Partial calque of Irish píobairí uilleann, or from uilleann pipes.
Noun
    
uilleann piper (plural uilleann pipers)
- One who plays uilleann pipes.
-  1999, Fintan Vallely, The companion to Irish traditional music, page 38:- Associated with The Long Note, he became its producer in 1978, in this series devoting time to documentary features, such as that on nineteenth-century uilleann piper and composer, Johnny Patterson.
 
-  2001, June Skinner Sawyers, Celtic music: a complete guide, page 106:- A twentieth-century master uilleann piper and mentor of many of today's finest pipers.
 
-  2004, Claire McKenna, A Complete Guide to Learning the Irish Tin Whistle, page 41:- He went on to become one of Ireland's foremost uilleann pipers [...]
 
-  2008, Jo Sprague; Douglas Stuart; David Bodary, The Speaker's Handbook, page 157:- Uilleann bagpipes in Ireland differ from Scottish pipes in that the uilleann piper uses bellows under the arm to keep the bag full rather than blowing into the bag.
 
 
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