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Mastering Spiccato
For inner voices, mastering spiccato is an absolute necessity
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By James Reel

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WHEN YOU START PLAYING IN ORCHESTRAS or chamber ensembles, one of the most important bow strokes you’ll need at your disposal is spiccato. Particularly in the inner voices in Classical-era music, you’ll be generating a rhythm, often of repeated eighth notes. The articulation has to be short, the individual notes clearly defined, so more often than not you’ll play them with a spiccato stroke—detached notes played with a springy bow. Your mission: Develop a good, rhythmic spiccato stroke. And remember, as Philip Tietze, assistant professor of viola and coordinator of chamber-music studies at Ball State University’s school of music, points out, “If it’s not even, it’s kind of pointless.”

Tietze knows his spiccato.

“It’s a stroke that every player needs in his or her arsenal because of the frequency with which it needs to be employed,” he says. “Many orchestra auditions consist of excerpts that are used to test someone’s spiccato. It’s a stroke that has to be mastered, and the earlier you can start, the better. But you have to make sure all the fundamentals are in place first, particularly the bow hold and the mechanics of playing. If that’s not all in line, then there’s no way you can play a decent spiccato.”

Tietze identifies two important elements of good spiccato: knowing where on the bow you’ll get best results, and keeping your elbow loose and your forearm mobile so you can keep the bow close to the string in good horizontal motion.

BOUNCE BASICS

First, find your bow’s bounce point. “A good spiccato stroke is actually fairly easy, because the bow kind of plays itself; it’s not something you need to work on if the fundamentals are in place,” Tietze says. So find the bounce point, which is usually the balance point, that spot where the bow hangs horizontally when you’re holding the stick from above, between your thumb and a finger. It’s not usually in the middle of the bow, more like a third of the way from the frog.

But spiccato isn’t only about the bow. According to Tietze, a good stroke means bringing the joints of your shoulder, elbow, and wrist all into play. “You can’t use one without the other,” he insists. “It’s especially important that the hand be relaxed. The most frequent problem in spiccato strokes is a bad bow hold, with lots of tension in the hand. The forearm needs to be able to move, so you have to be relaxed at the elbow, too; those two parts of the mechanism have to work in harmony. The stroke is generated at the shoulder—that’s where the energy comes from—but you have to make sure your forearm is loose and in motion and the hand is loose and has some give and take when you execute the stroke.”


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This article also appears in Strings, Issue #153




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