Make your shifts more reliable and predictable with a simple hack. For years as a young violinist, shifts seemed mysterious. No matter how much I practiced, they still felt like a gamble. Until I learned about finger pressure and its magical role during shifts.
Fritz Kreisler and the Epic Slide
On Feb 2 he would have been 146 years old, the timelessly suave Viennese violinist who epitomized the sound of violin playing a century ago. Who “discovered” previously unknown compositions from Tartini, Couperin, and Pugnani. And who performed the most epic, perfectly crafted slide in recorded history.
Samuel Barber, genius of the lyrical heart
Forty years ago, the soul that represented a summer breeze of lyricism in 20th Century classical music left this world. On January 23, 1981, Samuel Barber died. In a century of fragmented styles – some austere, some pandering, and some destined to be repurposed in horror movie soundtracks – Barber’s style remained solidly in touch with a lyrical core and grounded in the human heart.
Master Any Passage ... In Bite-Size Pieces (Practice Technique, Part 5)
We all have them: the “skyscraper” passages. The imposing technical passages that seem inscrutable, and maybe impossible. From the sidewalk in front of an actual skyscraper, it seems dizzyingly high. How could someone even build something so high?! And staring at a tricky passage on the page, it can be hard to even imagine how something so difficult could ever be performed. But with the right approach, there’s always a way.
Rhythm Master (Practice Technique, Part 4)
Make It Fail-Proof! (Practice Technique, Part 3)
Simplify the Tough Stuff (Practice Technique, Part 2)
Be Your Own Teacher (Practice Technique, Part 1)
Home-Made Music - Its Time Has Come (Again)
3 Tips to Find Your Natural Vibrato
Vibrato is something a lot of developing violinists struggle with. It seems so effortless when done well, but it can sure feel like a lot of work to develop. Some violinists claim it can’t be taught – each violinist just has to figure it out. Some teach it by going into great detail about every aspect of arm vibrato, wrist vibrato, finger vibrato, width, and speed ... not to mention finger pressure, finger angle, thumb placement, and more. The truth is probably somewhere in between.