Practicing with Open Strings to build a Beautiful Tone
Sunday, September 26, 2010 at 10:35AM
Travis Maril in Practicing

One of the most valuable practicing techniques for general tone and bow control is practicing with open strings.  There are an infinite number of ways to practice with open strings that will generate postive results.  I recommend incorporating 5-10 minutes of open string practice into your daily routine.  Here are some suggestions:

Definitions: Imagine that there are 5 points of contact on the string between the bridge and fingerboard, with contact point 5 being closest to the fingerboard, and contact point 1 being nearly on top of the bridge.

Practice all of these exercises on each open string, then with fingered notes in different positions.

Exercise 1 - Amount of bow stays constant; weight, speed, contact point change.

Exercise 2 - Weight and speed stay constant; contact point and amount of bow change

Exercise 3 - Son File

With your metronome set at quarter note = 40, play whole notes, practicing the following:

The goal is to expand your dynamic range, so that you play these exercises with the fullest forte and softest piano that you can.  Practice producing these dynamics changes first using only bow speed, then only weight, then only by changing your contact point, then put them all together!

 

Article originally appeared on The Studio of Travis Maril (http://www.travismaril.com/).
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