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****cato [spikˈkaːto] is a
bowing technique for
string instruments in
which the bow
appears to
bounce lightly upon the string. The term
comes from the...
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controlling the bow when it is off the string.[citation needed] (See also
****cato).
Flexibility of the
wrist is
necessary when
changing the bow direction...
- is also used for very
different bowings,
including staccato and
flying ****cato. Currently,
portato is
sometimes indicated in words, by "mezzo-staccato"...
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multiple ways to play the
****cato technique.
There is the “scoop”
****cato, the “ball bounce”
****cato, and the “seesaw”
****cato for the Sautillé technique...
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bowings which produce shorter notes,
including ricochet, sautillé, martelé,
****cato, and staccato. A note
marked pizz. (abbreviation for pizzicato) in the...
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their performed duration without speeding up the music.
Staccatissimo or
****cato This
indicates that the note
should be pla**** even
shorter than staccato...
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compositions of
Arnold Schoenberg such as
Pierrot lunaire.
spianato Smooth, even
****cato Distinct,
separated (i.e. a way of
playing the
violin and
other bowed instruments...
- violinist. His best
known work, the Elves' Dance,
makes extensive use of
****cato and is a show
piece for
intermediate beginners of the violin. Jenkinson...
- sforzato, martelé ("hammered"-style), sul ponticello, sul tasto, tremolo,
****cato and sautillé. Some of
these articulations can be combined; for example...
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difficult runs and
other technically demanding figures,
including flying ****cato and
ricochet bowings. Un poco più
lento – The
muted soloist plays a melancholic...