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Bagpipers perform for police Loud club music pounded at a crowded Baltimore bar as clients pushed their way through the packed room and shouted to be heard. Then it went silent and people dressed in kilts, carrying bagpipes and drums made their way in. The Sept. 25 performance at the Bay Caf on Boston Street was part of a Wagon Party, a fundraiser organized by the Baltimore chapter of the Police Emerald Society, a national organization that supports police officers. Dozens of people went silent and raised their drinks in honor of fallen police officers as the musicians played Grace. When the song was over, they filed out to thunderous applause. According to Crofton resident Sean Kelly, a piper in the band, the audience is what they are all about. don play bagpipes to play in the backyard by yourself, he said. For more than 20 years, the band has been playing traditional Irish songs throughout the area at parades and celebrations, as well as funerals and memorial services for dead police officers, firefighters, military personnel and FBI agents. They even played for President Bill Clinton in 1999. I had a little shoulder massage from Clinton, joked Meredith May of Oxon Hill, a piper who has been with the band since 1984. Band members dress in county officers white uniform shirts and kilts. Its pipers and drummers come from across Maryland. Pat Grogan, a county police officer, founded the band in 1984. According to Grogan, who now lives in Easton, things were hard at first members did not have kilts, had to buy their own pipes and wore old uniform shirts donated by the county police department. So he merged his band with the nearby Oxon Hill Pipe Band, led by Upper Marlboro resident Richard Blair, and the new band reached its peak of 42 members. All of the band members were police officers or firefighters when it was founded, but its membership became more diverse when it merged with the Oxon Hill band. The Police Pipe Band now includes performers from all walks of life. Members said new performers only play with the band after extensive training, which is provided by the band. Glenn Dale resident George Rogers, a retired county police officer who left the band but came back seven months ago, said he became interested in bagpipes because of his parents, who were second generation Irish immigrants. They sent him to Irish schools and signed him up for lessons in traditional music and dance, and he said he fell in love with bagpipes immediately. Rogers, a member of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, said Irish music has become less popular in recent years. Band members hope to do the same. Members said the group shrank to four performers a year ago, as officers and other members retired or moved away. But in recent years several former members returned, and four police officers joined in the last four months, bringing the band membership up to 10 performers. only a couple of us left, May said. our people are gone due to retirements and schedule changes but now we starting to build again. pipe band next performances are at the Oct. 18 Oktoberfest celebration at Ascension Catholic Church in Bowie, a benefit Oct. 26 for the Ancient Order of Hibernians at the Irish Channel bar in Crofton and the Nov. 11 Leonardtown Veterans Day Parade.