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Violin Mastery - ARTHUR HARTMANN - Part 3

Bloged in ARTHUR HARTMANN by Dan Thursday April 17, 2008

THE PROBLEM OF TECHNIC

“Technic, for instance, in its mechanical sense, is a much exaggerated microbe of Materia musica. All technic must conform to its instrument.[1] The violin was made to suit the hand, not the hand to suit the violin, hence its technic must be based on a natural logic of hand movement. The whole problem of technical control is encountered in the first change of position on the violin. If we violinists could play in but one position there would be no technical problem. The solution of this problem means, speaking broadly, the ability to play the violin—for there is only one way of playing it—with a real, full, singing ‘violin’ tone. It’s not a question of a method, but just a process based on pure reason, the working out of rational principles.

[1] This is the idea which underlies my system for ear-training and absolute pitch, “Arthur Hartmann’s System,” as I call it, which I have published. A.H.

“What is the secret of this singing tone? Well, you may call it a secret, for many of my pupils have no inkling of it when they first come here, though it seems very much of an ‘open secret’ to me. The finished beauty of the violin ‘voice’ is a round, sustained, absolutely smooth cantabile tone. Now [Mr. Hartmann took up his Strad], I’ll play you the scale of G as the average violin student plays it. You see—each slide from one tone to the next, a break—a rosary of lurches! How can there be a round, harmonious tone when the fingers progress by jerks? Shifting position must not be a continuous movement of effort, but a continuous movement in which effort and relaxation—that of dead weight—alternate. As an illustration, when we walk we do not consciously set down one foot, and then swing forward the other foot and leg with a jerk. The forward movement is smooth, unconscious, coordinated: in putting the foot forward it carries the weight of the entire body, the movement becomes a matter of instinct. And the same applies to the progression of the fingers in shifting the position of the hand. Now, playing the scale as I now do—only two fingers should be used—

I prepare every shift. Absolute accuracy of intonation and a singing legato is the result. These guiding notes indicated are merely a test to prove the scientific spacing of the violin; they are not sounded once control of the hand has been obtained. They serve only to accustom the fingers to keep moving in the direction in which they are going.

“The tone is produced by the left hand, by the weight of the fingers plus an undercurrent of sustained effort. Now, you see, if in the moment of sliding you prepare the bow for the next string, the slide itself is lost in the crossing of the bow. To carry out consistently this idea of effort and relaxation in the downward progression of the scale, you will find that when you are in the third position, the position of the hand is practically the same as in the first position. Hence, in order to go down from third to first position with the hand in what might be called a ‘block’ position, another movement is called for to bridge over this space (between third and first position), and this movement is the function of the thumb. The thumb, preceding the hand, relaxes the wrist and helps draw the hand back to first position. But great care must be taken that the thumb is not moved until the first finger will have been played; otherwise there will be a tendency to flatten. In the illustration the indication for the thumb is placed after the note played by the first finger.

“The inviolable law of beautiful playing is that there must be no angles. As I have shown you, right and left hand coördinate. The fiddle hand is preparing the change of position, while the change of strings is prepared by the right hand. And always the slides in the left hand are prepared by the last played finger—the last played finger is the true guide to smooth progression—just as the bow hand prepares the slides in the last played bowing. There should be no such thing as jumping and trusting in Providence to land right, and a curse ought to be laid on those who let their fingers leave the fingerboard. None who develop this fundamental aspect of all good playing lose the perfect control of position.

“Of course there are a hundred nuances of technic (into which the quality of good taste enters largely) that one could talk of at length: phrasing, and the subtle things happening in the bow arm that influence it; spiccato, whose whole secret is finding the right point of balance in the bow and, with light finger control, never allowing it to leave the string. I’ve never been able to see the virtue of octaves or the logic of double-stops. Like tenths, one plays or does not play them. But do they add one iota of beauty to violin music? I doubt it! And, after all, it is the poetry of playing that counts. All violin playing in its essence is the quest for color; its perfection, that subtle art which hides art, and which is so rarely understood.”

“Could you give me a few guiding rules, a few Beatitudes, as it were, for the serious student to follow?” I asked Mr. Hartmann. Though the artist smiled at the idea of Beatitudes for the violinist, yet he was finally amiable enough to give me the following, telling me I would have to take them for what they were worth:

Violin Mastery
Talks with Master Violinists and Teachers
by Frederick H. Martens
Published 1919


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Violin Mastery - ARTHUR HARTMANN - Part 2

Bloged in ARTHUR HARTMANN by Dan Monday April 14, 2008

WHAT VIOLIN PLAYING REALLY IS

“Violin playing is really no abstract mystery. It’s as clear as geography in a way: one might say the whole art is bounded on the South by the G string, on the North by the E string, on the West by the string hand—and that’s about as far as the comparison may be carried out. The point is, there are definite boundaries, whose technical and esthetic limits may be extended, and territorial annexations made through brain power, mental control. To me ‘Violin Mastery’ means taking this little fiddle-box in hand [and Mr. Hartmann suited action to word by raising the lid of his violin-case and drawing forth his beautiful 1711 Strad], and doing just what I want with it. And that means having the right finger on the right place at the right time—but don’t forget that to be able to do this you must have forgotten to think of your fingers as fingers. They should be simply unconscious slaves of the artist’s psychic expression, absolutely subservient to his ideal. Too many people reverse the process and become slaves to their fingers.

Violin Mastery
Talks with Master Violinists and Teachers
by Frederick H. Martens
Published 1919

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Interesting Statistics

Bloged in Interlude by Dan Thursday April 10, 2008

I was just running some numbers to see what percentage of Select Violins were going outside of the United States. Below are my findings.

28% of all violins sold have been to other countries.
72% of sales stayed in the USA

Comparing individual states of the USA and other countries, in the order of most sales:

First Place: California USA

Second Place: Italy

Third Place: Canada

Tied for Fourth Place: Texas USA, North Carolina USA

Tied for Fifth Place: Japan, New York USA, Wisconsin USA

Tied for Sixth Place: Alaska USA, Washington USA, Ohio USA, Pennsylvania USA, Connecticut USA, Maryland USA, Louisiana USA, Utah USA.

Others: United Kingdom, Germany, Russia, South Korea, Taiwan, Missouri USA, South Carolina USA, Vermont USA, Oklahoma USA, Illinois USA, Virginia USA, Alabama USA, Montana USA, West Virginia USA, Mississippi USA, Hawaii USA, Oregon USA.

It is interesting that Italy and Canada are near the top of the list for having purchased the most instruments from Select Violins, when compared to our individual states in the USA. (Remember that our states are as large or larger, geographically, than many countries.)

It is also notable that 55% of foreign sales were to repeat customers. The world market is important to us, as you can see by the numbers above.

Here at Select Violins, we average less than 10% in returned sales. And most of those returns were from people that were trying out other violins at the same time.

We treat everyone with the same family-friendly service. Whether you live next door or on the other side of the world, you are like a neighbor to us. We strive to be good neighbors who will serve you in the best way we can!

Best Regards,

Dan Keller


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Violin Mastery - ARTHUR HARTMANN -Part 1

Bloged in ARTHUR HARTMANN by Dan Thursday April 10, 2008

THE PROBLEM OF TECHNIC

Arthur Hartmann is distinctly and unmistakably a personality. He stands out even in that circle of distinguished contemporary violinists which is so largely made up of personalities. He is a composer—not only of violin pieces, but of symphonic and choral works, chamber music, songs and piano numbers. His critical analysis of Bach’s Chaconne, translated into well-nigh every tongue, is probably the most complete and exhaustive study of “that triumph of genius over matter” written. And besides being a master of his own instrument he plays the viola d’amore, that sweet-toned survival, with sympathetic strings, of the 17th century viol family, and the Hungarian czimbalom. Nor is his mastery of the last-named instrument “out of drawing,” for we must remember that Mr. Hartmann was born in Maté Szalka, in Southern Hungary. Then, too, Mr. Hartmann is a genial and original thinker, a littérateur of no mean ability, a bibliophile, the intimate of the late Claude Debussy, and of many of the great men of musical Europe. Yet from the reader’s standpoint the interest he inspires is, no doubt, mainly due to the fact that not only is he a great interpreting artist—but a great artist doubled by a great teacher, an unusual combination.

Characteristic of Mr. Hartmann’s hospitality (the writer had passed a pleasant hour with him some years before, but had not seen him since), was the fact that he insisted in brewing Turkish coffee, and making his caller feel quite at home before even allowing him to broach the subject of his visit. And when he learned that its purpose was to draw on his knowledge and experience for information which would be of value to the serious student and lover of his art, he did not refuse to respond.

Violin Mastery
Talks with Master Violinists and Teachers
by Frederick H. Martens
Published 1919

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