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Getting Started ! Some Violin and bow holding tips ! This page : v.0.82 Jan 2000 You have a new violin and you're wondering where to begin. Well, once upon a time, in the Paris Conservatoire in 1850 there was a great violin teacher called Allard who would give his beginners a long, even and deep G string sound to play. In fact, by coincidence, I invented a piece called Elephant parachutist, which also consists of an even open G sound, but if you've read the article on tonus, you'll know that you can play an open D as well. We are choosing a G or a D in order to experience a full and rich sound with plenty of bass. If it goes a bit wrong at least it won't screech like the E string might - which would seriously upset the cat ! In the first picture you can see what a G looks like in printed ( also called sheet ) music. It's a minim : it's worth 2 beats - so you count 1, 2, and as you say 3 you stop......but careful to play right up until you say 3 ! Is it important to count ? NO .... I'm just trying to put you off ! If you're playing on your own you must make an even sound like a ship's horn - only not so loud ! Now - where is the G string ? Well, look at the next picture. If you look at your violin from the front it's the thickest string and lies to the extreme left. It's also called the fourth string and is the lowest and deepest note the violin can sing. It has such a special sound on the violin that Wilhelmj transcribed Bach's Air to the G string....so it became known as Bach's Air on a G string ! You will need to make sure your violin is in tune so listen to this midi file ( or this one ) and you will hear a G, D, A & E. These are the same sounds as your 4 open strings. You will need to twist the tuning pegs / or the fine tuners to tune up ! If in doubt ask a guitar player / or any musical friend to help out. Soon there will be some midi accompaniment files available to download from this site. To make a note higher you twist the peg clockwise as you push it into the peg box so that it doesn't slip. ( corkscrew action )
We can start to line up now ! Place each foot under each shoulder. Keep your feet parallel, as if on a railway track. Maintain an even balance on both feet, and feel them firmly on the ground. Don't try and play on one foot, or on tip toe or any other precarious position, as violin playing is hard enough as it is ! Some performing violinists use a slightly more advanced stance, though it was once considered a great "Paganini" secret to maintain this evenly balanced posture. Whatever happens, never lean on your right foot, as this will burden your bowing arm. On the left is a picture showing some important parts of the violin. 1) is the Button. 2) is a chin rest which has feet both sides of the tailpiece, and 3) is a soft air filled shoulder pad - called "Play-on-air". You can start playing without a shoulder pad, but you may feel the violin is more stable with one of these filling in that gap between collarbone and violin. It's really important when you come to fingering and changing position with your left hand, as it will enable to support most of the weight of the violin, while releasing your hold and support of the neck with your left hand as you change position. For a chin rest ; there are many types on the market to buy, but chose a fairly flat one, and possibly one that allows you to place your chin as centrally as possible on the violin. This is a very important concept, and Isaac Stern, perhaps the greatest violinist alive uses a Hill type chin rest, which allows him to place his head almost directly above the tailpiece Item number 1) the button is very important when learning to play the violin. It goes in the middle of your neck, where your Adam's apple is, and must stay in contact with your neck, with no gap in between. I tell children that the violin button goes on top of all the buttons on their shirt - at least aligned with them. You will have to lift your head and turn it 45 degrees to the left while you gently place the button in the middle of your neck, and let the violin come to rest, touching your collarbone. Don't let the violin fall away or droop down. Hold it flat and horizontally for optimum bowing and sound. On the right you can see the white arrow pointing to the button. I have left a gap in between neck and violin in order to show how just where the button is placed. Normally there should be no gap at all, and the violin should feel very handy and close for comfortable playing to take place. On the right you may be able to see I have tucked my shirt collar under the violin, so that no clothes separate the violin from me. If you are wearing polo-neck jumpers then find some more comfortable clothing than will allow you to come in direct contact with the wood of your violin. If the chin rest is causing an irritation on your skin, make sure you do not have a plastic chin rest, and make sure you are not squeezing the violin too hard. Just let the some of the natural weight of your head fall on the chin rest. When you are changing position, and your left hand is executing rapid passages up and down the fingerboard, you may hold you neck more firmly on the violin, pulling the violin up and back to assure a stable platform ( fingerboard ) on which you can shift easily with a light left hand.
This is where you place your left hand if you are playing open string pieces. It's a great way to feel secure, and ensure your holding the violin in such a way you feel comfortable and easy. Notice how the thumb lies the other side of the neck. Really, you must just wrap your hand, like a paw, gently around the body of the instrument, and keep it there firmly.
Next we come to bowing. You don't have to get this all 100% right before having a go, but I am putting quite a lot of information here so you have plenty of knowledge and theory with which to improve - and of course just go at whatever pace you feel comfortable with. On the left I have placed my hand flat on a table top to show the correct attitude of the thumb. The nail should point almost towards the tip of the bow, and not down to the ground. This is a very natural position of the hand. A badly twisted or contorted or rigid thumb can compromise the freedom of the whole hand. I refer to the locking of the hand by bending it in the wrong way ! Just keep your thumbs flexible and very relaxed, and you won't strain your wrists and hands ! On the right you can see how I start placing the thumb first, holding the bow upside down. The thumb must touch the wood, yet also touch the leather grip and the frog at the same time. Notice how I am placing the thumb on its side, and I make sure it doesn't poke through and come out the other side. All this is to ensure flexibility and mobility of the thumb, especially, for example, when playing détaché.
On the left : I have numbered the fingers. Notice how the middle finger ( 2nd ) almost touches the metal guard ( top arrow ). Also it is the middle finger which is placed opposite the thumb. Almost all teachers insist on this ; that the middle finger and thumb form a ring. My first finger is wrapped around the bow, mainly around it's first joint. In other words the joint between first and second phalange. I have placed another arrow pointing to the tip of the 4th finger which remains rounded and in contact with the bow. This upside down bow hold is designed to ensure the correct placement of all the fingers. Once they have been placed, the bow is slowly tilted the right way up again, passing through the vertical and down again,, very slowly , so that the fingers can grow used to the changing balance of the bow and hand. Above : Another picture shows the natural bend in the thumb and little finger. Far left : Bad bowing angle at the heel - and to its right - a good angle of the bow at the heel. On the bad picture you may also notice a low wrist, which is responsible for the conduct of the bow. It is very common not to have a straight bow at the heel, yet at all times, the bow must be drawn perpendicularly to the strings for the purest sound. This principle was proved by Heifetz. To the right are two pictures of me bowing. Notice the point of contact ( the exact point at which the bow touches the string ). On the left picture I am bowing very fast and lightly, with only a few bow hairs, almost over the fingerboard. However, on the extreme right, I am bowing a mezzo forte ( louder ) ; my wrist is leaning into the string, I am using all the hairs flat on the string, and the point of contact is exactly half way between the bridge and fingerboard. Slower and more concentrated sounds can be obtained by using all one's weight and bowing even closer to the bridge.
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