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EntertainmentHow to Play the Violin

How to Do Vibrato on the Violin

Transcript

So now I’m going to talk about vibrato. First you need to set up your left hand position the right way. Now we spoke about how to set up your left hand in the first position but now we need to talk about the left hand positioning in the third position because that’s where I like to start learning vibrato. Your hand in third position is rested at the shoulder of the instrument. I like also doing the second finger on the A string to start because it’s the most centered finger, the strongest finger. My finger is on the tip of the fat of the finger, there’s a nice platform here and that’s how you start.

Then to vibrate what I usually do is, I put a little arrow on the finger going this way; that’s the direction the finger has to go in. Back and up. So back and forth, back and forth. And as you can see the knuckle is going down and then it’s going up. Going down and going up. So an exercise you can do is, that’s an E on the A string, third position and then collapse it, back, back. Then you can do a slur. That’s a two note slur. We can do four notes. Or you can do six. Then eight. And until you reach normal vibrato speed. You need to do that kind of vibrato for each one of your fingers.

When you vibrate also another issue that you have to think about is your arm position. Now we spoke about correct arm position is you’re flat as a pancake here, everything is straight, nothing’s sticking out. When you vibrate you do need your wrist; the most popular vibrato is wrist vibrato. So then you would do, this does come out when you flatten the finger a little bit. So the wrist is moving back and forth when you’re doing that finger-wrist vibrato. You need to do that with all of the fingers.

The only exception is the pinky. The pinky fourth finger does not use as much wrist just because of the physicalness of the actual finger. You’re still doing the same motion but it’s just a little bit smaller. It’s mainly the finger vibrato with just a little bit of wrist. That’s how you would start to learn vibrato. Start slow. That’s the vibrato.


Lessons in this Guide

What’s the Order of Sharps & Flats on Violin?

How to Find Good Violin Practice Music

Beautiful but Sad Violin Music Suggestions

Good Beginner Songs for Violin

Viola vs. Violin

How to Play Canon in D on Violin

How to Position Your Left Arm on a Violin

How to Hold the Bow for Violin Playing

How to Play a D Scale on Violin

What is 3/4 Time on Violin?

Bow Arm Movement & Direction for the Violin

How to Do Vibrato on the Violin

Right Hand Finger Exercises for the Violin

How to Play an A String on Violin

How to Finger Strike on Violin

What Are Different Bow Strikes on the Violin?

How to Apply Fingering Tapes for Beginner Violinists

How to Play an E String on Violin

How to Prepare a Violin Bow

How to Position Your Left Hand to Play Violin

How to Replace Violin Strings

How to Play G, A & B Notes on Violin

How to Play C Natural on Violin

How to Do a Right Elbow Swing on Violin

How to Place the Bow for Bowing Open String

How to Distribute Violin Bow Weight

How to Use Bow Division While Bowing Open Strings

How to Tune the Violin Strings

How to Pick Violin Strings

What Is Violin Shifting?

What Is a Violin Concerto?

What Is a Violin Chord?

How to Play Slurs on Violin

How to Hold a Violin

How to Play a D String on Violin

What Are Finger Patterns on Violin?

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