Electric bagpipes
Electric or electro-acoustic bagpipes refers to any set of bagpipes designed to use a pickup to detect the mechanical vibrations of the reed or reeds. As with an electric guitar, the detected electrical signal is then routed to an amplifier, and from there to a loudspeaker. Depending on the volume of the amplified sound, the acoustic sound of the bagpipe will also be heard to some extent alongside it.
The pickup used in bagpipes can be of either a magnetic or an optical type.
As with electric guitar, the output of an electric bagpipe is suitable for routing through effects units.
In comparison to the more common electronic bagpipes, which are sensor-based electronic devices designed to imitate the experience of playing bagpipes, the electric bagpipes are a rare, experimental instrument. No commercial instruments are currently known to be in production.
History
An instrument titled "The Eryri Bagpipes", which apparently used a magnetic coil pickup in conjunction with a specially design steel reed, appears to have been constructed by the year 2001, by Welsh piper Paddy Whetman. These pipes featured on Whetman's site from at least 2001-2006, according to logs on the . The maker also appears to have made a number of recordings featuring them, some of which can still be found on YouTube. In 2016, a video was uploaded to YouTube by Goat Industries, giving basic information about the instrument, closeup images, and an audio recording.French musician Yan Cozian has demonstrated an electro-acoustic Boha in a dated 11 May 2014. This instrument appears to use piezoelectric sensors, to collect the oscillations of the reeds directly.
The possibility of using optical pickup technology, to allow any standard cane-reeded bagpipe to be made "electric", was raised in August 2016 by Scottish Smallpipes player Donald WG Lindsay. This led to articles in UK & Scottish dailies, including a short video demonstrating a prototype instrument of this type.