Due to high call volumes during the Pre-World Cup season, we are currently unable to take all phone calls. Please leave a message or voicemail, and we will get back to you as soon as possible. Thank you for your patience.Dismiss
[**Due to high call volumes during the Pre-World Cup season, we are currently unable to take all phone calls. Please leave a message or voicemail, and we will get back to you as soon as possible. Thank you for your patience.]
About this product:
Key of D
Easy to play
Comes with its own fingering chart and five traditional Celtic tunes, one each from Wales, Scotland and Brittany and two from Ireland
Comes decorated with a Celtic Knot and is individually gift boxed
Handmade in the U.K.
Delivery Time
Inside Dhaka: From next day to 3 business days. *Inside Dhaka North and South City Corporation.
Outside Dhaka: From next day to 5 business days. **Home Delivery/Courier Delivery. Learn More
Shipping Charge
Inside Dhaka: Starts from 60Tk. **Inside Dhaka North and South City Corporation.
Outside Dhaka: Starts from 100Tk. **Home Delivery/Courier Delivery. Learn More
Payments
Cash On Delivery
Visa
MasterCard
American Express
UnionPay
Dinners Club
Bank Transfer
Spend TK.5000 or more and pay in 3 to 36 months EMI.
Clarke Celtic Tin Whistle- Green, Easy to learn to play, inexpensive, convenient to carry around, the Celtic Tin Whistle can be available for performances on all occasions. When Robert Clarke invented the Tin whistle in 1843, little did he know that it would become the perfect wind instrument to be played universally in all the Celtic lands. One cannot hear a slow air played with depth of feeling on a tin whistle by a true Celt without being drawn into, and sharing, the emotions expressed by the player. Each of the Celtic nations has it’s own instrumental tradition and each claim their right to specific instruments. The Scots will assert that the bagpipes are their national property; the Welsh the harp. The Irish claim the Uillean pipes as their own. One instrument played and adopted by all is the tin whistle. It can be heard in concert halls, broadcasts, churches and above all, especially in Irish pubs.
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.