Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 20, 2026

Cabrette

The cabrette is a type of bagpipe which appeared in Auvergne, France, in the 19th century, and rapidly spread to Haute-Auvergne and Aubrac.

Last revised
Jun 20, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
164 w
Citations
Source
Cabrette player Jean Rascalou source ↗

The cabrette (French: literally "little goat", alternately musette) is a type of bagpipe which appeared in Auvergne, France, in the 19th century, and rapidly spread to Haute-Auvergne and Aubrac.

Details

The cabrette comprises a chanter for playing the melody and a drone, but the latter is not necessarily functional. Though descended from earlier mouth-blown bagpipes, bellows were added to the cabrette in the mid-19th century. It is said that Joseph Faure, of Saint-Martin-de-Fugères en Haute-Loire, first applied a bellows to the cabrette. Faure, a carpenter stricken with lung disease, was inspired when he used a bellows to start a fire.

See also

See also

  • Chabrette, a similarly named bagpipe used in the Limousin region of central France
Sources

Sources

External links