The long staccato double-stop passage should be played with slightly detached notes, not staccato in the extreme sense, with a slight ritard toward the close, about two-thirds of the bow being used, so that the following legato passage may be free. The next two notes slurred must be played near the point of the bow, followed by a staccato passage, as before played lightly and detached, with a free running stroke. When there are groups of two notes, the first is accented. Phrasing must be clean-cut at this point:

[Listen]

Naturally there is a ritard at the close. The first part of the étude begins on the tonic triad, with the fundamental note absent. It is well to call the attention of the student to the fact that the second part of the étude opens with the dominant chord, the fundamental note being absent. There is a decided pause in the fourth measure, owing to the demands of phrasing. The student should play one phrase repeatedly until mastered. The fingers move simultaneously into new positions. They must take the position at once. In the third line the accompaniment to the theme must be lightly played, no note being carried over a rest. Do not accent in syncopated passages, nor play the note of the accompaniment too loud, giving it more than its value. In the seventh line the short notes or groups should be played almost in a recitative style. The student should think his interval at once when suddenly passing to double-stops; in the higher positions the fingers fall together. The long runs may be played more nearly in staccato style. In the third measure from the close, play the thirty-second note at the heel of the bow.

[Listen]

In order to fully appreciate this étude, it would be well for the student to hear the great singers in such works as Bocca bocca bella, by Lotti, or Vieni che poi sereno, by Glück, which offer examples of pure technic and beauty of phrasing. I believe I can say frankly that I have learned more about phrasing from the study of voice than from violin study. At any rate the one aids the other, and the student must learn to play Fiorillo and Rode like an artist, giving to purely technical works a value that will materially aid him in the interpretation of pieces. Style and phrasing are so essential to violin playing that one should hear much good music, and all teachers should be able to illustrate the important principles of bowing, phrasing, and technic.


No. 18.