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How To Play The
Violin
This article gives the essential basics for how to play the violin.
Generally violins are quite commonly available instruments and it
is reasonably easy to rent or buy a violin. Children may need smaller
violins (from an eighth, quarter, half, three-quarters, seven-eighths
up to full size) to accommodate smaller hands if they are going
to be learning over an extended period.
The Basics
The bow is held in the right hand with the thumb bent underneath
the frog to support it and the other hands loosely gripping the
wood. There are many different holds and it its important to find
one that suits your hand size and strength. The violin is held with
the left hand, with the chin on the chin rest supporting most of
the weight, and the fingers loosely coiled around the neck of the
violin. The thumb should be relaxed but firm. The left elbow should
be curved under the violin. The violin should be roughly horizontal
and the right arm held high. The main methods of playing the violin
are bowed and pizzicato.
Bowed
The bow should be drawn swiftly and smoothly across the strings,
about halfway between the fingerboard and the bridge. A down bow
starts with the hand close to the strings pulling across the string
from left to right, and is generally used on strong beats. An up
bow goes the opposite way, right to left, and is used on weaker
beats and upbeats. However with practice down bows and up bows should
be fairly difficult to distinguish. Slurs in music indicate that
all notes within a slur should be played in the same bow movement.
To play loud notes, the bow is pressed down harder on the string
using the index finger or the bow is drawn across the string faster.
To play more quietly use less pressure or draw the bow across the
string slower. In classical music bowed music is indicated by the
Italian term arco.
Pizzicato
To play pizzicato (often abbreviated to pizz.) the right thumb should
be placed under the fingerboard and the index finger used to pull
the string quickly upwards and across. For faster passages, the
bow can be held while playing pizzicato, still using the index finger
but without the support of the thumb. In more complex and advanced
pieces, a small cross above the stave indicates the fingers of the
left hand plucking the strings.
Fingering and positions
As there are no physical aids such as frets for violinists as there
are for guitarists, accurate tuning comes with immense practice.
On a full size violin, the tones are roughly two centimeters apart,
but this is difficult to judge when playing since you are seeing
from a different perspective. To aid tuning, it is very helpful
to have a piano or other keyboard instrument when practicing.
The fingers of the left hand are conventionally named first (index
finger) to fourth (little finger). When playing notes other than
open strings (G, A, D and E), these fingers must press down hard,
so that the string is shortened convincingly for a higher pitch.
The standard intervals taught to beginners is tone, tone, semitone,
tone (ie. G-A-B-C-D, D-E-F#-G-A, A-B-C#-D-E, and E-F#-G#-A-B). Of
course the notes in between can be played by rearranging the hand
position.
This is known as first position, where the first finger plays up
to a tone above the open string. The next position usually taught
is third position, where the first finger plays the note a perfect
fourth above the open string (so, for example, third position on
the A string would start on the D). All positions from first up
to anywhere around tenth can be thus played, and two octaves on
one string are considered fairly standard.
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about the violin?
Go to: http://www.mrviolin.com
'Mr Violin' is published by Helen Baxter -
The Complete A to Z Of Violin Resources!
Check out more violin articles at: http://www.mrviolin.com/archive
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