The iconic sight and sound of pipers playing Auld Lang Syne at Hogmanay Street Parties could be under threat – according to concerned piping enthusiasts.
Experts believe that the national instrument is under threat due to a lack of opportunities for pupils to learn the bagpipes in school.
More than 75,000 people are expected to descend upon Princes Street on December 31 to bring in the New Year, which will see thousands of revellers sing along to the famous song at midnight.
But enthusiasts worry this could soon become a thing of the past unless more is done to teach the pipes and drums to state school pupils.
David Johnston, Championships Convenor for the Scottish Schools Pipe Band, says that there is a concern that the skills will become regionalised and elitist with many of the country’s top bands coming from rural communities or private schools.
Edinburgh and Glasgow are viewed as the real problem areas, with many state schools still not offering pupils the opportunity to learn piping or drumming in the classroom.
David said: “The future of our national instrument is under threat because if the inability of most of Scotland’s councils to offer lessons in their schools.
“Some say there is no money for it, some say there is no demand. Yet where we have helped schools get tuition the demand is huge – and if a council can afford a glockenspiel teacher, surely they can afford to teach pipes and drums.
“In several schools across Scotland, parent councils have had to resort to take their own action to set up after school clubs and bring in teachers at their own expense to offer tutoring to their children.
“I find it disappointing that in so many Scottish state schools piping and drumming is not on the curriculum – yet many private schools have flourishing bands and dedicated pipe tutors which bring huge prestige and self-esteem to band members and to the school.
“If this worrying trend continues we won’t have any future pipers and drummers and hearing the roar of pipes and drums on Hogmanay could become a thing of the past.”
Councils in areas such as the Highlands and Argyll and Bute are known to have a significantly larger portion of their students playing the pipes and drums whilst in school than in other areas.
However, in the largest Scottish cities, there are only a handful of pupils playing the pipes and drums and in some council areas, there are no students playing these instruments all.
The Scottish Schools Pipe Band Championships – the world’s biggest schools piping competition – is looking to change this by hosting a unique competition which looks to celebrate the pipes and drums and encourage their growth in schools throughout Scotland.
Craig Munro, a piper from the hugely successful Red Hot Chilli Pipers, believes that if more state schools in Edinburgh and Glasgow were to introduce the pipes and drums into their curriculum, other schools across Scotland will follow.
He said: “It is clear that several schools are trying to get school pipe bands up and running but it’s becoming increasingly difficult to get the piping and drumming onto the curriculum.
“If schools can offer students the likes of the recorder to learn music, then why not the bagpipes? It seems as though there is a lack of choice as to whether or not kids can learn the pipes and drums whilst in school.
“What many people perhaps don’t realise is that it is possible to build a fulfilling career from the bagpipes.”
He added: “What’s great about The Scottish Schools Pipe Band Championships is that they help to raise the profile of these instruments and encourage our younger generations to learn them.”
Last year, the Scottish Schools Pipe Band Championships attracted more than 400 young pipers and drummers from schools across Scotland.