Tenor Viol Elementary Lesson 1: Posture and Pizzicato

Viol Player Book 1

Chapter 1

P24 Up and Down Again
P40 Soldier’s Call
• Looking at good posture, not arching your back, with knees over feet. Holing the viol with the right side tucked in.
• Does a rubber cloth help in the initial stages of learning the viol? The advantages and disadvantages.
• Learning the names of the strings from the middle out, rather than from the bottom string up.
• Left hand position and the relationship of the thumb to the second finger. Keeping the thumb bent out with the point of contact on the side. Transferring weight to each finger and not pressing too hard.
• Placing of the fingers correctly on the frets so each plucked note rings. Impossible to get a good sound with the bow if the finger on the fret is not placed correctly.
• How to play pizzicato.
• Learning in such a way that the left hand can go on autopilot, playing with your eyes closed and visualising the notes.

Tenor Viol Elementary Lesson 2: How to Bow and Bowing

Viol Player Book 1

Chapter 1

• Feeling the weight in your arm by swinging it.
• Hold your right arm, with your left hand and wiggle it! Feel the wrist move as a reflex action to having a floppy arm.
• Bow hold: Put your bow on lap – horse hair on knuckle, 2nd finger through the hair and stick. The thumb tickles the stick and the 1st finger is passive and cradles it. Bow hold is only complete when bow is on string. What does it feel like?
P24 Up and Down Again
• How much to tension the bow hair: Depending on the density of the stick, but if it looks like Robin Hood can ping arrow from the bow, it’s too tight! If it’s too loose, it’s difficult to hold and wiggles around.
• Being comfortable: Take a picture on your phone for a physical reference to your body and the position of your viol.
• Bow under the strings – before you apply rosin! Feel the movement of hour relaxed arm.
• When you hold the bow, think of the arm coming ‘up’ from under – this will help to keep the elbow down (especially if you play modern strings). Make sure your palm is vertical and the is bow is turned away so it looks like you’re playing on the wood of the stick. If the palm of the hand is not vertical the bow hold can feel very insecure.
• Check you bow hold: Take off your 1st finger and thumb from the stick and see if the bow remains on the string and feels secure. Take your bow off the string with your left hand and it should ping back onto the string.
• Hold the bow in the left hand at the tip and put the bow on a string and move the arm up and down the bow. Close your eyes and feel the movement of the arm.
• Starting to bow on the middle two strings.
• For bowing think push and pull rather than up and down and this can help modern string players to not get the bow stoke mixed up. Think of racket sports and a strong stroke with a bat is the same as a forehand stroke and a back hand being the same as a pull bow.
• Push is strong and pull is weak; tension and resolution.
• How to rosin the bow.
• Looking after your viol: Always wipe the strings, the belly of the viol and the stick of the bow with a duster when you have finished playing. It’s very easy to get a build up of rosin on the string and not make good contact with it.
• P14 Bowing & Viol Aerobics in 8 bows to each string and continuing with 4, 2 and 1 move bow forward and back – not up and down.
• To keep the bow parallel to the bridge, imagine you are bowing under a table (apart from the top string).
• Use right leg as a runway to keep the bow level. (apart from top string)
• Close your eyes and remember physical references to help embed muscle memory.
• P24 Up and Down Again; arco (with the bow). Separate each hand by learning skills separately: play without the left hand and bow the string the notes are on.
• Bow on string – breathe in and out.
• When string crossing in bar 8, the bow comes back, not down.
• P14 N25 Singing Cucumber – arm forward and back. Memorise, play with your eyes closed and feel the bow stroke changing from string to string. Little challenges. Important to learn these skills by putting them on autopilot.
• 15. Up and Down Again – both hands finishing with 2 fingers down and a relaxed right arm.

Tenor Elementary 4: Playing on the C string and string crossing

How to leave a string ringing when you play another adjacent or non-adjacent string and be in a good place on the bow to make string crossing easy. Learning the notes on the C string including 4th finger. Feeling your arm weight when playing with the bow. Starting with a back bow.

Repertoire: Fairy Dance p 61, Rounds p 65, Viol Player Book 1

Viol Player books come with play along CDs or downloadable mp3s and are available from Rondo Publishing https://www.rondopublishing.co.uk Or just with CDs from the Early Music Shop https://earlymusicshop.com

Tenor Viol Elementary 5: Scales, Slurs, Strong Finger/Finger Glue Viol Aerobics, & Barring

Putting your left arm on the viol without looking. Changing string and leaving fingers down. Keeping the sense of arm weight with the bowing arm, when learning new pieces. Holding fingers down across 3 strings. Checking left hand position with left thumb bent outwards. Consecutive back bows; using the right hand 3rd finger to support the bow hair to play quietly.
Barring with 1st finger and how the hand position changes. Playing an upbeat on the right place on the bow. Learning to co-ordindate faster short notes with a faster bow.

Repertoire: Finger Glue Viol Aerobics, Month of Maying p10 Viol Player Bk 2.

Viol Player books come with play along CDs or downloadable mp3s and are available from: https://www.rondopublishing.co.ukhttps://earlymusicshop.com

Tenor viol Elementary 6: Technical Review of lessons 1-5: The Breathing Bow and Arm Weight

In lesson 6 we continue with Viol Aerobics on the top 3 strings. Looking at 2 pieces from Viol Player book 1, we work on planning the bowing to be in the right place for the rhythms and dynamics. Using barring fingering on G and B.


Technical review:

Left hand:
1. Notes octave below middle C to top G string
2. Holding fingers down across two strings
3. How to make pizzicato ring

Right hand:
1. Bow distribution
2. Bow speed
3. Dynamics
4. String crossing over adjacent and non-adjacent strings
5. Lifting off the bow with the tip of the third finger
6. Ping bowing
7. Arm weight and having a flexible wrist

Repertoire: Mother Russia p 45 & Tadpole Dance, Mattachins p66, Viol Player

Book 1. Viol Player books come with play along CDs or downloadable mp3s and are available from; https://www.rondopublishing.co.ukhttps://earlymusicshop.com

Tenor Elementary Lesson 7: String Crossing – arm coming forward and back and how it keeps the tone.

Lesson 7 String Crossing – arm coming forward and back and how it keeps the tone. Playing a piece arco without the left hand. Feeling relaxed with the bow sinking into the string.
Placing the left hand on the viol without looking and checking your hand shape. Holding fingers down across two strings so the viol resonates in thirds.


Bow direction on the top string and first finger notes on the second fret.
Barring with first finger and how it changes the hand position. More on bow distribution and listening to the other part to determine dynamics. Practising a longer piece and checking to see if your bow is still in the same place relative to the bridge.


Repertoire: Fanfare book 1, Bobbing Along, Viol Player Book 1


Viol Player books come with play along CDs or downloadable mp3s and are available from: https://www.rondopublishing.co.ukhttps://earlymusicshop.com

Tenor Elementary Lesson 8: When to use a 4th Finger or an Open String

Placing 4 fingers down together and on different strings. Transferring weight when placing fingers down together and making sure other fingers don’t pop up! Bow distribution: working up the bow to be in the correct place for the note length and dynamic marking.
Talking about good practise routines – golden rule; always try to maintain a good sound, by being a Technique Detective!


When to play a 4th finger or an open string in context of a bar and which beat and the length of the note value. Developing technique with fingers being held down, because if feels right, rather than marked. Learning a piece with dynamics from the beginning.


Repertoire: Circles 2nd set Viol Player Book 1. Page 7 Pavan Mille Ducas, Study in G, p 15, Viol Player Book 2.
Viol Player books come with play along CDs or downloadable mp3s and are available from: https://www.rondopublishing.co.ukhttps://earlymusicshop.com

Tenor Elementary Lesson 9: Strengthening the 4th Finger & having a Relaxed Hand

More on getting a strong 4th finger and the use of finger weight. Barring with the first finger and looking at how hand shape changes for a flat first finger across two strings.
Slurs on 2 and 4 notes. Keeping slurred notes on the same string. Non adjacent string crossing – forward and back.

Playing on the G string and understanding how to play with a beautiful sound on the top string.


Repertoire: Nimble Fingers p 11, Summer is icumin in p 9, 4th Finger on the 4th string p17, Lannigan’s Ball p16, Viol Player book 2.


Viol Player books come with play along CDs or downloadable mp3s and are available from; https://www.rondopublishing.co.ukhttps://earlymusicshop.com

Tenor Elementary Lesson 10: More Nimble Fingers with Ping Bowing, finishing with Dowland

Looking at different hand positions for each string with ‘Nimble Fingers’ p24. What happens to your bow arm when you play fast with the left hand.
String crossing and where to be on the bow to make it easy. Jumping Viol Aerobics. Practising with yours eyes closed. Looking at a relaxed arm on string crossing. P24.
Notes on the top string and playing close to the bridge.
Mr George Whitehead, his Almand p 27 with bautiful back bows and short resonant notes.

See you at the next level!

Viol Player books come with play along CDs or downloadable mp3s and are available from: https://www.rondopublishing.co.ukhttps://earlymusicshop.com