The Musical Archeologist

Craig Dabelstein

The Musical Archeologist explores forgotten ideas from music's past — old books, neglected composers, vanished musical worlds, and surprising stories from the archive. Hosted by Craig Dabelstein, the podcast brings historical musical thought back to life for curious modern listeners.

Episodes

  1. Why do bagpipes exist all over the world?

    53 mins ago

    Why do bagpipes exist all over the world?

    The Musical Archeologist Episode 002: Why Do Bagpipes Exist All Over the World? Host: Craig Dabelstein Music: Composed by Jeffrey A. Young Series: The Musical Archeologist: Forgotten Ideas from Music's Past Episode Summary When most people hear the word "bagpipe," they immediately think of Scotland. But the bagpipe is not only Scottish. Versions of the instrument appear across Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, Iran, India, and beyond. In this episode of The Musical Archeologist, Craig Dabelstein explores Ernest Closson's fascinating idea that musical instruments are not merely tools for producing sound, but historical documents. A bagpipe tells us something about breath, landscape, ceremony, dance, community, and the practical problems human beings have always tried to solve through music. At the centre of the episode is one beautifully simple question: how can a wind instrument keep sounding when the player needs to breathe? The answer is both comic and ingenious — put the air in a bag. That flexible bag becomes an artificial lung, allowing melody and drone to continue beyond the limits of the human body. The episode asks why similar musical ideas appear in many cultures, and how one instrument can be both universal in principle and deeply local in meaning. Source Book The idea for this episode comes from: Ernest Closson, The Musical Instrument as an Ethnographic Document Translated by Craig Dabelstein Published by Maxime's Music Closson's book, originally published in Brussels in 1902 as L'Instrument de musique, explores musical instruments as evidence of human history, migration, culture, invention, and contact between peoples. Rather than treating instruments only as technical devices, Closson presents them as witnesses to the lives and imaginations of the people who made and used them. Buy the book: https://books.by/maximes-music Podcast webpage: https://craigdabelstein.com/podcast/ In This Episode This episode considers: why bagpipes are found in so many parts of the world; the difference between an instrument travelling historically and an idea being independently rediscovered; the bag as an artificial lung; drones, outdoor music, ceremony, and dance; the way musical instruments can become strongly associated with place and identity; Closson's broader idea that instruments are cultural documents. Links Craig Dabelstein: https://craigdabelstein.com/ Maxime's Music: https://www.maximesmusic.com/ Maxime's Music YouTube: https://youtube.com/@maximes-music Credits The Musical Archeologist is written and presented by Craig Dabelstein. Music composed by Jeffrey A. Young. Additional music: "Amazing Grace" performed by bagpipe soloist Sandy Jones and Scott Gunn, with the Pipe Bands of the United States Air Force Reserve Band and the United States Air Force Band. From Glorious Past, Boundless Future (2002). Public domain in the United States as a work of the U.S. federal government. This episode is based on ideas from Ernest Closson's The Musical Instrument as an Ethnographic Document, translated by Craig Dabelstein and published by Maxime's Music. Suggested Citation Dabelstein, Craig. "Why Do Bagpipes Exist All Over the World?" The Musical Archeologist: Forgotten Ideas from Music's Past, Episode 002.

    7 min
  2. 1 hr ago ·  Bonus

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About

The Musical Archeologist explores forgotten ideas from music's past — old books, neglected composers, vanished musical worlds, and surprising stories from the archive. Hosted by Craig Dabelstein, the podcast brings historical musical thought back to life for curious modern listeners.