Such a lot seems to have happened since the advent of Covid-19 that it feels like an eternity since I was last in a real classroom teaching my string groups at school. In one of the last sessions with my six- and sevenyear- olds, we were tackling a piece called Look at the Starlight from the Take Your Bow series. It is an atmospheric piece accompanied by high-register cluster chords in the piano part that give an unworldly cosmic feel. It can be taught across all beginner strings, from violin to double bass.
There was a sense of excitement (and jubilation, even) when I introduced the harmonic glissandos that come halfway through the piece. Unfortunately, it didn’t last long. While the cellists and double bassists, used to playing harmonics from very early on, were happily touching their D strings and floating their hands up to the top of the fingerboard and back down again, the violinists were clearly struggling. Back then (in early March) I had no compunction about going over to the nearest violinist to guide his arm to help him feel the sensation of moving up to the top of the fingerboard as he touched the string. I confess I wasn’t too surprised to find that his left hand was firmly clamped on to the neck – no wonder it wasn’t going anywhere.
I know gliding up and down the string is easier for cellists and bassists; they have to move a lot further, but they can see what they are doing and the movement seems more natural. I also know that teaching young players to hold the violin isn’t the simplest undertaking. However, as I attempted to take everyone back to playing a single harmonic halfway along the string it seemed that none of the violinists in my group (each taught by a different violin teacher) had ever encountered them before. They seemed wary of moving their left hands away from first position, rather like beginner pianists who are too used to playing around middle C. Of course, it is entirely possible that they had been shown how to play harmonics by their teachers, but had forgotten how to do it. I don’t mean to point fingers; I’m merely observing that I wish harmonics were taught more often in the early stages.