

Although Shostakovich uses it very little in his First Concerto, his Cello Sonata uses around 250 and his Trio uses well over 400, often in complex, thematic and fast passages.Īlthough pizzicato is not used much in pre-20th century standard soloistic cello repertoire, it is used a lot by the cello in chamber and orchestral music of the Classical and Romantic Periods. Then, in the 20th century, pizzicato takes off and becomes a much more frequently used effect. It makes great use of a variety of thematic pizzicatos in both the second movement (Adagio) and the final movement. Brahms’ F Major Cello Sonata breaks this tradition and is one of the first big cello pieces in which we find pizzicato being used in more imaginative and demanding ways. In the Classical and Romantic Periods, even those cello pieces that make more frequent use of pizzicato tend to use it in a very simple way. The following table gives an overview of the frequency of pizzicatos of some of the most well-known pieces of the cello repertoire, presented in (approximate) chronological order: SOLO REPERTOIRE Tchaikovsky’s Rococo Variations has two, the Lalo concerto has four, and the Dvorak concerto has none but does have eight (tricky) left-hand pizzicatos.

the concertos of Haydn, Saint Saens and Schumann have absolutely no pizzicatos in their solo parts.pizzicatos were not used in the Baroque cello repertoire.This is because pizzicato is rarely used in the solo parts of the most popular concertos, sonatas and virtuoso showpieces, and is therefore rarely taught or studied. It is possible to be a very good cellist but at the same time a very bad “pizzicato-ist”. The following link looks at this question in more detail: Like a pianist, we can now choose to play each note with the minimum necessary movement (which is unbelievably boring and uncommunicative) or we can let the right-arm participate in the musical communication, becoming more of a dancer and adding expressivity to our music-making. Because we don’t need to keep our bow glued to the string, the movement possibilities for the right-arm in pizzicato suddenly become enormous. Pizzicato is also a great way to study and improve our basic body language at the instrument. Open the following article for a more detailed look at this question:Īnticipation and The Preparation Principle This is why converting a normally-bowed passage into pizzicato (at a slow or moderate speed) can be a very useful practice technique for working on our left-hand: it is like watching it in a slow-motion video or putting it under a microscope. Once the resonance has faded away, our left-hand can relax, giving us more time to prepare for our next note and freeing up more brain space to observe what is going on between the notes. Now, all our notes are like bells: after the initial pluck (sounding), we are left with only the resonance, the sound gradually fading away because there is no motor (bow) to keep pumping energy into the sound. Suddenly, we stop singing (bowing) and start playing the guitar, harp or piano. Pizzicato, on any string instrument, takes us into a whole new musical world …….and also into a whole new technical world, not only for the right-hand but also for the left-hand.
