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Here’s how to get the hang of spiccato: Start with your bow on the string, right at the bounce point. Begin playing short strokes, generated at the shoulder, with a relaxed forearm and hand.
“The stroke is initiated with the big muscles, and then the small muscles react to that,” Tietze explains. “The hand relaxes and is allowed to move back and forth without being forced consciously to move. This makes the stroke easy, because it makes the bow bounce naturally. The modern bow is made to bounce, so if you know what you’re doing, it will bounce by itself. So after you’ve played on the string with the right part of the bow so you know what it feels like to play at the bounce point, then suspend the bow a little off the string, let it bounce at the bounce point, and once the bow hits the string, draw it slightly across the string and release it again. You’re making a figure U with your hand. Don’t have the bow too high off the string. Gradually do that faster and faster, until you get to the point where the bow is staying a little closer to the string and you’re letting the bow bounce off the string by itself, and you just ease into the string that way. If the setup is correct, especially in the right hand, it should bounce by itself.

Image Credit: Timothy Jang
FOCUS ON FUNDAMENTALS: Don’t bounce the bow too high off of the strings.
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“So the hand has to be relaxed, you have to use the proper bow hold, your forearm has to be free to move—then play at the bounce point and make sure the bow doesn’t come too far off the strings.”
THE FINER POINTS
That’s not quite all. Tietze points out that there are different kinds of spiccato. “The technique changes as the demands of the music change, especially the dynamics,” he says. For a softer spiccato, raise your right elbow a little and tilt the bow a little, so you’re not playing on all the hair. For a louder spiccato, especially on the lower strings, and especially if you’re playing in upper positions on those lower strings, play closer to the frog and use primarily the shoulder.”
Problems? If the spiccato is uneven, it’s due to tension in the hand and, to a lesser extent, tension in the elbow. Tietze complains, “I see a lot of spiccato generated solely from the shoulder, so the bow can’t bounce consistently at the bounce point because it’s moving around so much.”
If the sound is scratchy, not clear and resonant, you’re playing too far off the string. Explains Tietze, “The horizontal motion has to be greater than the vertical motion to get a resonant sound. The horizontal motion is most important. Staccato isn’t just up and down; it’s really back and forth.”
Finally, Tietze says, spiccato has its limits. “Spiccato can only be played up to a certain speed,” he says. “After that it’s sautillé
, a completely different technique. We have to differentiate between them, and it’s a matter of the rapidity of the stroke.”
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