StringSection Blog

Posts Tagged ‘Violin technique’

Left Hand Pizzicato

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Left Hand Pizzicato is a specialised technique which is generally employed in more virtuosic string music and involves the fingers of the left hand actually plucking at the string, often with another finger ’stopping’ the string to create the pitch. It differs in sound from a normal pizzicato because of the place on the string where the plucking occurs. Normally, a pizzicato would happen within two or three inches of the top of the fingerboard whereas by it’s nature, left hand pizzicato occurs much further down, a few inches from the ’start’ of the string, near the nut (raised area at the bottom of the strings).

When the strings are plucked in normal usage, the sound is fulsome and (depending on the string) will take a slight amount of time to die away, whereas in L.H pizzicato, the sound is much tinnier and has a thin, pecking sound. Paganini uses it in his 24th Caprice to great effect by alternating it with ‘up bows‘ which have a similar sonority.

In L.H Pizzicato, the strength of fingers is important and those string players with well developed finger muscles will find it easier to perform than those with weaker fingers. Like normal pizzicato, the string is plucked sideways with the finger applying lateral pressure in a ‘dragging’ motion followed by a rapid release.

Most importantly of all, it is marked by a cross (+) above a note. The effect of L.H Pizzicato is a surprising one and gives a very flashy touch to a piece. It very rarely occurs in orchestral music but appears more in the solo repertoire.

Glissando and Portamento

Saturday, August 29th, 2009

The word ‘Glissando’ comes from a French verb ‘to slide’ and applies to any passage where one note slides rapidly up or down to another. On the piano this is done by drawing the finger quickly up or down the keys and the technique is often used in music written for harp, trombone or any of the string family.

On a stringed instrument, this glissando effect can be achieved by simply sliding from one note to another on the same finger on the same string - it can be used to give a slightly ‘folky’ feel (swooping up to a note as in bluegrass or Celtic fiddle music) or could be used more slowly to add tension or suspense to an arrangement. A common use of glissando is in horror films or psychological dramas when anticipation of something sinister is being built up. One well known pop song which utilised glissando effectively in the strings was ‘Day in the Life’ by the Beatles and it features quite widely in quite a few tracks by ELO.

Although Portamento seems quite similar to glissando in the fact that it’s a gliding from one note to another, it is different in the fact that it doesn’t tend to connect the two notes with the slide but is more of a gentle sliding at one end of the interval or the other. For example, a violinist could go from say, a D to the same note an octave higher, with the portamento providing a shorter slide  at the beginning  of the interval, before landing accurately on the higher D - or it could leave the first note, then land a little bit early and swoop up to the upper D. This gives an expressive slide but without the two notes being completely connected. In its’ best use, writing in portamento can add real character and feeling to a phrase, making it full of character and adding interest / life to the strings.

Including both glissando and portamento in a string arrangement can work well for solo instrumentation or a full string section, adding either one skilfully can liven up strings and add excitement or expression.