Stewart Emily 2013 Nosig
Stewart Emily 2013 Nosig
Stewart Emily 2013 Nosig
OpenBU http://open.bu.edu
Theses & Dissertations Boston University Theses & Dissertations
2013
Stewart, Emily K
Boston University
https://hdl.handle.net/2144/12231
Boston University
BOSTON UNIVERSITY
Dissertation
by
EMILY K. STEWART
2013
© 2013 by
EMILY K. STEWART
All rights reserved
Approved by
First Reader
'
Second Reader
Peter Zazofsky, B.M.
Professor of Music, Violin
Third Reader
arc Johnso 20 .
Adjunct Prof sor of Music, Cello
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I would like to express my appreciation and gratitude to my advisor, Dr. David Kopp,
for the guidance, assistance, and mentorship he provided to me. I would also like to
thank my committee member and teacher Peter Zazofsky, for assuring me four
years ago that my suspicion about a better way to play the violin was not
unfounded, nor was it original. I would also like to thank my committee member,
Finally, I would like to thank my pedagogue, George Neikrug, for his incomparable
expertise on the teaching and methods of D.C. Dounis. I am grateful for his
interminable patience with me, his confidence in my potential, and his archive of
analogies that always seem to do the trick. I will continue to learn from what he has
iv
DEMETRIOS CONSTANTINE DOUNIS:
(Order No. )
EMILY K. STEWART
ABSTRACT
medical doctor. Above all, he was a teacher who developed some of the most
innovative methods for violin playing of the 20th century. Dounis carefully observed
the technique of the great masters of the violin, both privately and in concert,
including Jascha Heifetz, Fritz Kreisler, and Eugene Ysaye. His keen sense of
background in medicine helped to form the anatomical and physiological basis for
his technical principles. Although it is often assumed that Dounis's teaching was
the author's acquired understanding of the technique through the tutelage of former
Dounis student, George Neikrug. This dissertation also explores Dounis's unique
v
approach to teaching, his philosophy on practicing, as well as his methods of
facilitating technical change for his students. The final chapter is an exploration into
the cognitive aspects of achieving physical habit change in violin technique. The
struggle to change the technical habits of violin playing is both physical and mental
on many levels, and this difficulty is the main reason as to why Dounis's unique
vi
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION 1
Expressive Technique 50
Teaching Methods 58
BIBLIOGRAPHY 87
VITA 91
vii
LIST OF MUSICAL EXAMPLES
Ex. 3 D.C. Dounis, The Absolute Independence of the Fingers, Op. 15, 61
Book II Section B, Third Fundamental Exercise
Ex. 4 D.C. Dounis, The Absolute Independence of the Fingers, Op. 15, 61
Book II Section B, Modifications 1-3 on the Third Fundamental Exercise
viii
INTRODUCTION
Imagine yourself as a violinist for whom there are no limits. You are able to
play all 24 Caprices by Paganini with the same facility you have in playing any
Sonata by Mozart. Nothing is too difficult for you. Your interpretation and
expression of the music comes across clear as day, without any interference from
faulty or insufficient technique. Your colleagues and critics remark on how your
playing always looks and sounds completely effortless. You have been compared to
and classified with violinists such as Paganini, Sarasate, Heifetz, Kreisler, Thibaud,
How did you do it? You may have been practicing since the age of five: six to
eight hours each day, beginning with two hours of scales, arpeggios, and double
stops. Various teachers throughout your life may have prescribed technical
methods and exercises by SevCik, Fischer, and Flesch. You've drilled difficult
passages until you could play them in your sleep. You arrive to every performance
three hours early to ensure adequate time for warming up. Every day of your life
Or, you may be a natural. The greatest violinists of all time have been
referred to as "natural" violinists. Every note they played seemed effortless and
spontaneous. A natural doesn't require long hours of practice every day. Heifetz
said, "I do not think I could ever have made any progress if I had practiced six hours
1
a day .. .. I hardly ever practice more than three hours a day on an average, and
besides, I keep my Sunday when I do not play at all, and sometimes I make an extra
holiday." 1 On the topic of technical exercises, Thibaud said, "Technique does not
exist for me in the sense of a certain quantity of mechanical work which I must do."2
Concerning the practice of warming up before performance, Kreisler said, "It has
often done me more good to dip my finger-tips in hot water for a few seconds before
What sets these revered violinists apart from the masses is a combination of
technical facility, the quality of the sound produced, and the expression and
students by highly esteemed teachers all over the world. If the student is
disciplined, focused, and diligent, a high level of playing will likely be achieved.
However, few, if any, will succeed in joining the ranks of the great masters. What is
it, then, that took the great masters to the next level? Was it an environmental
One man believed that the key to unlocking the mystery of the great masters'
1 Frederick H. Martens, Violin Mastery: Talks with Master Violinists and Teachers
(New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company), 79-80.
2 Martens, Violin Mastery, 264-65.
3 Martens, Violin Mastery, 105.
2
Dounis believed there were common elements to the technical aspects of each
masters' playing. Through his keen sense of observation and experimentation with
his own playing, Dounis devised a philosophy of violin playing that was completely
different from the methods that were and still are commonly followed. As with any
new way of thinking, his methods were met with a great deal of resistance and
criticism from the field. His ideas were often misunderstood and rejected
immediately by professional violinists. Students and teachers who heard about his
methods by word of mouth saw him as a radical. His philosophy was controversial,
yet he had many devoted students who credit their success entirely to his teaching.
Highly acclaimed violinists of the time went to him in secret so as not to draw the
Since his death in 1954, it has been on the shoulders of his disciples to extend
the work of Dounis to future generations of violinists. They are few in number, and
they face even harsher resistance and criticism than before. Few of Dounis's
published works remain in print today. Although it is still common for a student to
have his Violin Players' Daily Dozen, opus 20 on their music stand, these exercises
are of limited value until the ideas supporting the methods are understood.
4Louis Kievman, "D.C. Dounis: The Man and His Pedagogy," journal of the Violin
Society of America, 6, no. 3 (1983), p. 12.
3
This dissertation will focus on the philosophy behind the methods of Dr.
Demetrios Constantine Dounis. It will explore his background in both music and
medicine, which formed the anatomical and physiological basis for his technical
George Neikrug. Although it is often assumed that Dounis's teaching was exclusively
approach to teaching will be examined. The final chapter is an exploration into the
technical aspects of violin playing is both physical and mental on many levels, and
this difficulty is the main reason as to why Dounis's unique methods have often been
4
CHAPTER ONE
DOUNIS: THE MAN
young age to experience music as those in high society did at the time. He attended
music classes at the Odeon in Athens and gave his first violin recital at the age of
seven.6 Three years later, Dounis went to Italy of his own accord to study the violin,
but was swiftly fetched back to Athens by his father, Constantine. 7 Constantine
believed there were only three acceptable professional paths for his son: the
church, law, and medicine. Only these fields were considered suitable "to carry on
the family traditions -worthy professions in which a gentleman might engage with
s George D. Oakley, Music on the Tradewinds, Honolulu -Star Bulletin, March 19,
1938, quoted in Costantakos, 13-14.
5
At age eleven, Dounis again defied his father by enrolling in violin, mandolin,
years, earning a soloist diploma. Dounis kept up with his regular schooling, which
required him to study the writings of philosophers Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle as
Following his studies at the Athens Conservatory, Dounis was invited to give
a series of small concerts in the United States at the age of fourteen. The
circumstances of the arrangements for this tour are unknown. He concertized in the
homes of several affluent patrons before his father again came to bring him home to
Athens.lo Upon his return home, Dounis continued to diligently study violin and
Duncan was exploring new philosophies in dance and challenging the rigidity of
classical ballet. Duncan believed that traditional dance was "deforming the beautiful
woman's body" and sought to achieve a more organic approach to dance, using the
these theories directly with Dounis, the philosophy of technique he later developed
9 Constantakos, 14.
1o Symphony Magazine 8 (November 1954): 4, quoted in Constantakos, 14.
11 Isadora Duncan, The Dance of the Future (Leipzig: Eugen Diedrichs, 1903) quoted
in Carol Sinsky, "Isadora Duncan: Life and Literary Connections," The Modernism
Lab at Yale University, http:/ jmodernism.research.yale.edujwiki/index.php/
lsadora_Duncan (accessed July 29, 2011).
6
would be similar to Duncan's ideas on dance in many ways.
Perhaps it was this experience with Isadora Duncan that inspired Dounis to
pursue a professional combination of art and physiology. After again being forced
by his father to return to Athens, Dounis finally acceded to his father's wishes and
medical school with Czech virtuoso Franz Ondficek.1 2 It is suspected that Dounis co-
to collaborating with a medical doctor for his New Method of Obtaining the Masterful
Dounis assumed a pseudonym for the publication, perhaps to avoid the attention
and anger of his father. It would not be the last time Dounis adopted a fictitious
After graduating medical school, Dounis went to Paris, where he began his
fellowship at the Paris Charity Hospital. There, Dounis met the Belgian violinist
Cesar Thomson, who became his teacher and friend. Thomson was famous for his
capacity as a technician made him the perfect agent for showcasing the difficult
12Constantakos, 14-15.
13Franz Ondficek and S. Mittlemann, Neue Methode zur Erlangung der
Meistertechnik des Violinspiels auf anatomisch-physiologisches Grundlage (Vienna:
Nickau & Welleminsky, 1909).
7
works of these composers. Thomson was also the driving force behind the revival of
continuing studies with Thomson and his work with patients as a medical doctor
During Dounis's last year of his fellowship in Paris, his father died. As soon
as he had fulfilled his obligations to the hospital, Dounis left Paris to pursue a career
The concert tour was briefly interrupted in 1913 as Dounis travelled through
Bulgaria. The second Balkan War (June 1913- August 10, 1913) pitted Greece and
Bulgaria against one another, and Dounis was arrested as a citizen of an enemy
Greece entered into World War I in 1917, and Dounis was drafted to the
medical corps. He took advantage of having time off from performing to document
the ideas on violin technique that he had been formulating for several years. During
the day he performed his military duties, and at night he wrote what would become
the exercises that comprise La Technique du Via/on, which was later published as the
14 Patrick Peire. "Thomson, Cesar." In Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online,
http: I lwww.oxfordm usiconline.com.ezproxy. bu.edul subscriberI arti de I grove lm us
icl27882 (accessed August 2, 2011).
15 Constantakos, 16.
8
Artist's Technique, Op.12.16
Dounis completed his service to the Greek military in 1919 and was hired as
a professor of violin and viola, as well as conductor of the orchestra at the National
Odeon of Salonika, Greece in the same year. He served on the Odeon's faculty for
three years, until his contract was terminated by the Board of Directors because of
multiple leaves of absence taken without permission. Some of his absences were
due to his travels related to the publication of Op. 12; others were for concert tours.
His dismissal from the Odeon allowed him to take his concert tour to Egypt, Russia,
France, Austria, and Holland. In 1923, after a short stay in London, he travelled to
shared a floor with four other Greek men, one of whom was his own brother,
Antonio ("Anton"), who was not a musicianY Dounis soon got a job performing as a
mandolin soloist on a weekly program on the Blue Network radio station, which was
broadcast from the Aeolian Building in Midtown.1 8 He was also able to recruit a few
violin students, including his roommate Prodromos Nomides, who was an officer of
16 Constantakos, 16; D.C. Dounis, The Artist's Technique of Violin Playing (New York:
Carl Fischer, 1921). The Artist's Technique of Violin Playing was originally written
in French as La Technique du Violin, but was first published by Hofmeister of Leipzig
in German as Die Kunstlertechnik des Violinspiels. Although only one earlier work
has been located, it is assumed that Dounis's first eleven compositions were pieces
for solo mandolin, composed while traveling for his European concert tour. The
opus numbers are believed to be Dounis's own numbering.
17 Constantakos, 18.
18 Frank Sulek and Peter Kanze, The Airwaves of New York: Illustrated Histories of
156 AM Stations in the Metropolitan Area, 1921-1996 (Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co.
Inc. Publishers, 1998) 105.
9
the Hellenic Bank of New York City. 19 Teaching Nomides as a beginner inspired
Dounis to write more books on technique. In 1924, Strad of London published The
Absolute Independence of the Fingers, Op.15, and Preparatory Studies in Thirds and
Fingered Octaves, Op. 16. Fundamental Trill Studies, Op. 18 and The Staccato, Op. 21
Dounis's most famous work, The Dounis Violin Player's Daily Dozen, Op. 20,
was published in 1925 by Harms, Inc. in New York. This set of twelve exercises is
now known as "The Daily Dozen", and is the only publication by Dounis commonly
used by violinists.today. Dounis's intended audience for this book was the
professional violinist who lacks time in the day for practicing technical exercises
way to keep the right and left hands in shape in a relatively short amount of practice
time.
Universal in Vienna. Only a few of the many books, editions, and transcriptions that
Dounis was working on in his early years in the U.S. were being published at the
Although Dounis was busy writing and traveling to the publishers, he was
also working to earn a living in New York. He had a few students, but his
for a weekly radio program, Dounis played background music during the filming of
19 Constantakos, 18.
10
silent films at studios in Astoria, Queens. He gave mandolin recitals at the
Hippodrome and Town Hall in the late 1920's.2 0 In all of his appearances as a
mandolinist, Dounis used his brother's name, Anton Dounis, as his stage name. He
did not want to use his own name because he wanted to be known as Demetrios
Dounis, the violinist, not the mandolinist. Although he was very successful as a
mandolinist, his real passion was for the violin. He was sure that eventually he
would emerge in the U.S. as not only a great violin teacher, but also a great soloist.
He saved his true identity, worried that he would not be taken seriously by the
mandolinist.21
Dounis was known for playing technically challenging violin repertoire on his
mandolin recital programs. On January 25th, 1925, Dounis played a recital at the
Bijou Theatre that included Vieuxtemps' Violin Concerto No.4 in its entirety,
Chopin's Nocturne in E flat, Op. 9, No.2 (arranged for violin and piano by Sarasate),
concert includes quotes from the European press in response to his previous
mandolin recitals in Paris, Berlin, Vienna, Leipzig, Moscow, and The Hague. One
11
The concert at the Bijou Theatre was reviewed in the New York Times the
following day:
Dounis held another position in the late 1920's and early 1930's as a violist
for the Roxy Symphony Orchestra. This time, he went by the name of "Yaltoff' and
did nothing to dispute the assumption by orchestra members that he was Russian.
futur e reputation as a violinist. Dounis's Russian fa<;ade was likely also due in part
to the concert scene being flooded with successful Russian violinists at that time
(e.g. Mischa Elman, Jascha Heifetz, Nathan Milstein). Dounis may have taken on a
The concertmaster of the Roxy Theater Orchestra was Mischa Violin, who
had given his debut recital at Carnegie Hall in 1920 and was received
Yaltoffto listen to him play. Violin began studying with Yaltoffregularly, and Dounis
eventually revealed his true identity to him. When Violin told the contractor of the
orchestra with whom he had been studying, he said," ... his name is not Yaltoff but
12
Dounis. He is the world's greatest teacher." 25
Dounis continued to play with the Roxy Theater Orchestra and teach
privately into the early 1930's. In 1933, Dounis was contacted by Mrs. Leona Flood
of Los Angeles. Mrs. Flood was the wife of Frank B. Flood, who had been the owner
of a small fresh milk and ice cream company that had been bought by a new
enterprise, the Carnation Milk Company. 2 6 Flood became the manager of the
company's western district and was consequently well off. The Floods had a
daughter, also named Leona, who was just fifteen years old at the time and had been
studying violin for several years. Mrs. Flood was unhappy with the violin teachers
who had been hired to teach Leona and did not feel that her daughter was receiving
the appropriate instruction for her level of playing. In an attempt to help Leona
herself, Mrs. Flood read The Artist's Technique of Violin Playing by D.C. Dounis.
Convinced that this book contained the information her daughter needed to succeed,
she contacted the publisher, who then put her in contact with Dounis directly.
Leona went to New York with her mother to play for Dounis, and after just one
lesson it was decided that it would be in her best interest to study with Dounis full-
time. Due to her regular schooling, it would not be possible for Leona to come to
New York to study with Dounis, so an arrangement was made for him to move to
2s Constantakos, 19.
26 "Carnation Concern Boosts Local Plant," Spokane Daily Chronicle, October 7, 1939.
13
Philadelphia for the publication of Fundamental Technical Studies for the Young
Violinist, Op. 23. He then left for Europe to accompany Leona Flood on her first
concert tour. The year-long tour began in Oslo, Norway, where she gave a recital in
honor of her grandfather, from whom her family had inherited a fortune that had
permitted the purchase of a Stradivarius for Leona to play on the tour.27 The tour
Hungary, and Italy. Leona later made her New York debut in 1938 at The Town Hall.
While in Europe, Dounis was able to publish two more works: New Aids to the
and master classes. Because Dounis never had a long-term appointment with any
communicate his principles of violin technique. Leona joined him in Sydney, having
Word of Dounis's unique teaching spread, and with his prize pupil's
exceptional technical ability to support the efficacy of his methods, Dounis was
inundated with requests for lessons in the early 1940s. He established a studio in
New York on East S2nct St. in Midtown, and travelled between the east and west
coasts to teach privately. Most of his students were already professionals, many of
27 "Eastern Debut for Local Miss", Spokane Daily Chronicle, September 24, 1938.
2s Constantakos, 20.
14
whom felt their playing had reached a plateau and that they could no longer
improve. One of his first well-known students was violist William Primrose.
Primrose had studied violin with Eugene Ysaye in Belgium before becoming a violist
and joining the London String Quartet. In the late 1930's, he came to New York to
play with the NBC Symphony Orchestra and began studying with Dounis in 1940.
Dounis worked with Primrose on the technical differences between playing the
violin and the viola and formulated exercises specifically for Primrose. In 1941,
Dounis wrote Specific Technical Exercises for the Viola, which was published by Carl
Fischer, Inc. in New York Later that year, Primrose launched his solo career when
he was invited to join tenor Richard Crooks (of the New York Metropolitan Opera)
on tour.
Cellist George Neikrug had studied with virtuoso Emanuel Feuermann until
1942, when Feuermann unexpectedly died. A friend of Neikrug's, who was studying
with Primrose at the time, told him that Primrose had raved about his lessons with
Dounis. Neikrug began studying with Dounis in 1943, after having pled with him for
New York, Neikrug felt his playing had hit a wall. He had resigned himself to the fact
that he would always be a section player, in the back of the orchestra. Neikrug was
Before my time with him, I had a concept of what I wanted to sound like but I
couldn't do it, so I was envious of those around me who had a seemingly
15
natural technique. Thanks to Dounis, I eventually developed this same kind
of technique. 29
Neikrug went on to make his debut as a soloist in 194 7, and later became
principal cellist with the Baltimore, Pittsburgh, and Los Angeles Philharmonic
Neikrug has since become the chief disciple of Dounis's teaching, and is considered
It is unknown exactly how many students Dounis taught in his lifetime, and
the identity of many of his students has remained secret. In 1983, violinist Louis
Kievman wrote:
April, 2011:
His New York studio had two doors: one in the front, and one in the back. We
would enter through the front door, and exit through the back. This way, one
student never encountered another as he was coming or going. This was for
reasons of professional pride. 31
In the same interview, Neikrug confirmed the reluctance of at least one "well-
She said, "Would you help Yehudi a little bit? He has trouble with his bow."
had about ten sessions with him ... Everything I told him was Dounis's
teaching, and [Menuhin] told me, "I wish I'd met him ." A few years later I was
working with the pianist Arpad Sandor32, who had accompanied Menuhin. I
told him the story about working with Yehudi, and what he'd said about
wishing he'd met Dounis. Sandor said, "But he did meet Dounis. We went
together to him many times."33
Besides the illustrious violinists who may have studied with Dounis in the
1940s, Leona continued to study with him and concertize as well. Her mother, Mrs.
Leona Flood, acted as his secretary, and was strongly committed to exposing the
musical world to Dounis's expertise. Frank Flood, husband and father, died in 1946
after a long illness.34 Dounis and the elder Mrs. Leona Flood were consequently
married in 1949.35
Dounis's work in the 1940s also produced a number of his most significant
Studies, Op. 36, and Essential Scale Studies, Op. 37. He also transcribed a number of
Chopin's Etudes for the violin, including the composer's Op. 25, No.6, which was
17
originally written in thirds for the piano. Dounis first transcribed it for the violin in
thirds, and then again in tenths. Dounis also edited and fingered Paganini's Twenty-
Four Caprices for Solo Violin and Bach's Six Solo Sonatas and Partitas. 36
Dounis's teaching responsibilities became intense in the late 1940s and early
1950s. In 1948, he began a series of master classes in Los Angeles with which his
soon-to-be stepdaughter Leona assisted him in teaching. In the next five years,
Dounis travelled to and from Los Angeles, New York, and London to give master
classes and to continue teaching his regular, loyal students. During what would be
his final trip to London, Dounis became very ill and returned to California, where he
In his final weeks, Dounis insisted that his students bring their instruments
and play for him. He was still teaching on his death bed, adamant that the time he
had left be spent advising his students on their playing. About this unfortunate time,
Neikrug said:
Two days before he died, I went to see him. He weighed about sixty pounds.
He held out his finger and said, "What's the difference between the up bow
and the down bow?"38 He was still teaching until the day he died.39
On August 11, 1954, Demetrios Constantine Dounis died in Los Angeles. His
occupations had included doctor, performer, and teacher. Ultimately his teaching
following his death, as he was no longer alive to defend and directly explain his
19
CHAPTER TWO
THE TECHNIQUE
Only Heifetz knew what in his artistic development he really owed to Auer's
teaching, but technique probably was the least of it ... In fact, Auer didn't
change the way Jascha held his instrument because the child accomplished
everything in a way that seemed natural for him. 40
When considering the technical abilities of great masters of the violin such as
Heifetz, Elman, Milstein, Szigeti, and Thibaud, the term "natural technique" is often
used to describe the ease with which they played. Thanks to the development of
legendary violinists today. Evidence of the natural capabilities of the great violinists
who lived and performed before the age of recording can be found in written
testimonials. In April 1896, The Strad printed violinist Charles Dancla's account of
I was thirteen when I heard Paganini, a strange, fantastical man, yet endowed
with a prodigious power of execution. What clearness, what assurance, what
sympathetic warmth in his tone ... At that time my youthful imagination was
so impressed and exalted by that devilish, and yet suave execution, that I
could not sleep that night ... What struck me from the start was the precision
of the fingers of the left hand, which were falling upon the fingerboard like a
mighty claw ... the fingers falling always vertically and perfectly placed ... The
ensemble of the fingers, so indispensable to obtain a sure intonation, I have
noticed after Paganini only in Vieuxtemps. I had also noticed in Paganini his
large, dry hand of an astonishing elasticity; his fingers long and pointed,
which enabled him to make enormous stretches and double and triple
extensions with extraordinary facility. The double and triple harmonics, the
40 Ayke Agus, Heifetz as I Knew Him (New Jersey: Amadeus Press, 2001), 148.
20
succession of harmonics in thirds and sixths, so difficult for small hands,
owing to the stretch they require, were to him but child's play. 41
The secret of his mellow, noble tones, the absolute clarity of his passage
playing, and his wonderful cantilena doubtless rested, for the greatest part,
upon his masterly manner of holding the violin. The instrument rested
solidly in the hollow of the shoulder but was held lightly by the chin,
affording perfect freedom of motion. 43
Anyone could observe the playing of all the aforementioned violinists and see
how their respective techniques are different. No two violinists are exactly the same
in how they hold the instrument, how they move the bow, or the movements of the
left hand. Perhaps as a result of his medical training, Dounis took a scientific
technique. He believed that this was the key to mastering the instrument. Dounis's
approach to violin technique was based on the idea of "natural physiological laws
Instead of forcing the arms, hands, and fingers to adjust their shape and movements
to accommodate the violin and bow, the body's natural tendencies were applied to
the instrument. George Neikrug says that while most teachers insist that their
students make drastic kinesthetic alterations, what Dounis did was "make the
instrument fit you. Everything is based on nature and instincts. [Dounis] said we
are all born with these instincts, and we lose them through faulty education. He
wanted to bring back the instincts that you were born with." 4 6
Dounis believed that one should approach playing the violin as if it were any
other normal activity. Former New York Philharmonic violinist and Dounis student
William Carboni said, "The way you handle everything in daily life, you do not have
any trouble with your hands. They do everything you want. No problems." 47 At the
time, most teachers were training students as if the violin was an alien object, and
the shapes and movements of one's body while playing were exceptional, and
should be different from how one's body moves naturally. For Dounis, playing the
violin should be as simple as walking. "He said that if you started to explain how
you walk, the action of every toe, the foot, the ankle, and analyzed all that stuff, you
mystifying theories of technique that had been previously taught and let his
students' natural instincts dictate their own personal approach to the violin.
One of the most basic elements of human instinct is a sense of balance. For
babies, balance begins with sitting up. This is done instinctively, without
instruction. This sense of balance progresses with the ability to stand, and
ultimately to walk Balance plays a key role in the foundation of Dounis's technique.
The concept of balance underlies all the technique of Dounis' teaching: the
balancing of the body on the feet; balancing the bow between the middle
finger and the thumb; balancing the left hand on the fingerboard; and finally,
the sense of balance between both hands. 4 9
Val borg Leland writes about the "balanced hold" of the bow in "The Dounis
First in importance is to find the central feeling of balance. The centre of the
hold must be between the thumb and the middle finger. They work together
and are opposite each other on the bow. The two weaker fingers (the third
and fourth) at one side of the centre hold furnish a balance with the strong
first finger on the other side (two against one). They must be strong, flexible,
and always on the bow.so
To demonstrate this concept with his students and to relate it to their natural
instincts, Dounis would have them step away from their instrument. He would have
48 Ibid.
49 Constantakos, 33.
so Valborg Leland, The Dounis Principles of Violin Playing: Their Meaning and
Practical Application (London, The Strad, 1949) 13.
23
them pick up something, such as an inkwell, from the top, with only their fingertips.
To illustrate which fingers naturally balance one another, he would then ask the
student to pick up the object again in the same fashion, but this time only with the
thumb and one other finger. Every time, the student would instinctively choose to
lift the object with the thumb and middle finger. This is the feeling of natural
balance between the thumb and middle finger that must be applied to the bow.
Dounis would often use this method of finding a student's natural instincts
He would say, "Touch anything, but not your instrument." When you touch
anything else, your instincts come out. When you touch your instrument, the
results of faulty instruction come out. There aren't words that exist to tell
you how something natural feels. So he would have you touch other things,
find the natural way, find your instincts, and then go back to the instrument
and try to apply it.Sl
The Thumb
of bowing technique is the position and shape of the right thumb. While most
violinists and teachers will concede that there is no one universally correct way to
hold the bow, the vast majority will say that the thumb must be bent (flexed, at up to
a 90° angle) when playing at the frog, and must extend (towards straight) as the
bow approaches the tip. This thumb position consequently results in the tip of the
thumb being in contact with the stick. The rule of the bent thumb can be traced
back to violinist and pedagogue Louis Spohr (1784-1859) in his treatise Violinschule,
Dounis believed that the thumb should be positioned on the bow in the most
natural way possible for the violinist's hand, and he strongly believed that the bent
thumb was rarely natural. Pick up a pencil, a wine glass, or turn the page of a book.
backwards with the first joint extending inward toward the underside of the
fingers). For Dounis, this was also the correct position of the thumb on the bow. By
allowing the thumb to position itself in this way, the thumb will come into contact
with the stick not at the tip of the thumb, but away from the fingernail towards the
pad. 53
Dounis looked to the great masters of violin playing (mainly Heifetz and
Kreisler) to formulate and ratify his concept of natural technique. The idea of
applying the hand's natural shape to the bow hold had been earlier favored by
I myself have found that there can be no exact and unalterable rule laid down
indicating which one or which ones of the fingers shall in one way, or another
grasp and press the stick in order to secure a certain effect. Pages upon
pages have been written on this question without definitely answering it. I
have found it a purely individual matter, based on physical and mental laws
which it is impossible to analyze or explain mathematically. Only as the
result of repeated experiments can the individual player hope to discover the
best way in which to employ his fingers to obtain the desired effect. 54
act as a "fulcrum", which, Suzuki claims, facilitates greater bow control, balance, and
the articulation of notes. 5 5 Because it is not a natural shape for the hand, keeping
the right thumb in a bent position is one of the most difficult aspects of bow
technique for beginners (especially children) to master. The thumb will usually
either remain straight or hyperextend slightly. Endless exercises have been created
to help beginners maintain a bent thumb. Dounis would argue that there is no
reasonable explanation why the thumb must be bent to act as a fulcrum . Allowing
the thumb to assume a naturally extended position also facilitates the correct
position of the wrist and arm, as well as his technique of drawing the bow. 56
The act of drawing the bow across the string is commonly taught based on
the idea that the string should support the bow. In order to produce sound, the bow
hair must rub the string to create friction. To create this friction, the weight of the
bow must rest on the string as the bow is drawn. To create more sound, many
teachers tell their students to "press harder", or to let the weight of the arm rest
upon the hand and fingers, which transfer this weight to the stick, and as a result the
bow hair presses down onto the string. While most experience violinists and
teachers frown upon the idea of "pressing" on the bow, it is still generally believed
55 Perkins, 153.
56 George Neikrug, interview by author, Concord, MA, May 11,2011.
26
and taught that the bow hair must be allowed to rest on the string as much as the
natural gravitational force will allow. According to this method, the string supports
the weight of the bow, and perhaps the weight of the entire arm up to the shoulder.
In Carl Flesch's The Art of Violin Playing, Flesch indicates that additional pressure is
needed on the bow when playing near the tip, due to the fact that the bow is lighter
at tip than at the frog. According the Flesch, playing at the tip requires additional
pressure on the bow by pronating the forearm and hand to lean heavily on the index
finger .57
to Dounis, the weight ofthe arm should never be placed on the bow. "He said [the
arm] was like a crane, you just carry the bow along like a big crane in
weight of an entire appendage, "as it does not allow the strings to breath, and,
Beginning students often remark that they hear another noise when they
play, besides the tone coming from the violin. They usually describe it as a
"scraping" or "scratching" sound. This is the sound of the bow hair rubbing against
the string, and it is a result of excess weight of the arm pressing onto the bow. The
sound can be audible several feet away from the player, but is so common an
57 Carl Flesch, The Art of Violin Playing Book/, trans. Eric Rosenblith (New York: Carl
Fischer, 2000), 53.
58 George Neikrug, quoted in Constantakos, 42.
59 Constantakos, 42 .
27
occurrence that most teachers and informed listeners have come to accept it as a
residual effect of bow technique. In fact, most players have likely never heard the
sound of their violin without this extra noise. Dounis's approach, however, does
away with this residual sound. Furthermore, when a violinist does play with the
given to the instrument itself being of superior quality. The sound of the violin
tone. "I went to a Kreisler recital and sat four feet away from him. His bow hand
looked like a caricature of what Dounis taught. There was no bow noise, only the
production of sound."60
If the arm should not rest downward on the bow, it must then be lifted by
way of engaging the supporting muscles of the shoulder and back. This is the key to
achieving a truly balanced hold of the bow in the hand. The thumb, which acts as
the fulcrum beneath the stick, works in opposition with the fingers above the stick.
Upward action from the thumb helps to prevent the feeling of "dead-weight" on the
strings.61 "The whole idea is support. The thumb is the sound post for the bow."6 2
Violinist and Dounis pupil Bernard Eichen says, "You need big muscle energy, and
the whole concept is that [the bow] just floats." 63 This gives the bow a weightless
natural way and the use the supporting muscles of the back, shoulders, and arms to
lift the bow up rather than press it down. The path that the bow follows will also
dramatically affect the sound production. Dounis said that we must "overcome the
defects of the tools we are given," 65 and one of these defects is the uneven weight of
When the bow is pulled, the trajectory of the hand should not be on a flat
plane, but on an arc. This arc helps to equalize the weight of the bow on both sides
of the string. Think of the bow as an uneven lever, and the A string as the fulcrum.
When the bow (lever) is placed on the string (fulcrum) at its balance point, there is
equal weight on either side of the string. Move the bow so that the string is closer to
the frog, and the upper part of the bow has now become the heavier end. In order to
equalize the weight on both sides of the string, the hand should scoop downward so
that the bow hair favors the E-string side of the string. As the bow is moved away
from the balance point toward the tip, the lower part of the bow becomes the
heavier end. In order to equalize the weight, the hand should scoop upward so that
should scoop downward, and above the balance point the hand should scoop
upward. This arc trajectory should be followed at all times to get the most balanced,
Bow Strokes
The most fundamental type of bow stroke in violin playing is the detach e.
Detache is traditionally defined as a stroke in which the hair of the bow does not
leave the string, and the bow does not stop between the down-bow and up-bow
strokes. Dounis, however, uses the term "detache" interchangeably with "bow
stroke". According to Dounis, all bow strokes (i.e. sautille, martele, spiccato, etc.) are
Detache.
"When the bow is pushed or drawn without accenting the change of bow, it is
called simple detache." 66 Dounis further categorizes simple detache into two
different strokes: "broad detache" (which includes sustained tones as well as legato,
in which more than one note is played within one bow stroke), and "fast detache".
He more commonly refers to these strokes as the "paintbrush stroke" and the
The broad detache is based on the idea of the right hand acting like a paint
66 D.C. Dounis, The Artist's Technique of Violin Playing, Op. 12, (New York: Carl
Fischer, 1921), 72.
67 Constantakos, 42-43.
30
brush, the hand being the handle and fingers the bristles. As the hand pulls the bow
in the up-bow direction, the fingers hang behind and move sympathetically in the
same direction, just as the bristles of a brush follow the handle in painting. The
same happens when the bow is drawn down-bow, but in the opposite direction. For
the down-bow, the bow should be pulled against imaginary resistance, extending
beyond the tip of the bow. This imaginary resistance will equalizes both ends of the
bow, as the up-bow will have the real resistance of gravity to pull against. "The
down-bow is passive and the up-bow is active." 68 As previously discussed, the bow
should not bear any weight from the arm. "Think about if you were a painter, you
would never let the brush rest on the canvas. It would be a live brush. You need to
Dounis referred to the fast detache as the "eraser stroke" because the
movement mimics that of the hand when using a rubber eraser. It can be defined as
a short de tache using no more than two inches of the bow_?O Dounis often had his
students familiarize themselves with the stroke by literally using an eraser. Valborg
Hold an eraser between the thumb and the first two fingers. Now place the
hand in a slanting up-bow position on a table. With wrist motion alone, erase
an imaginary mark from the table with the fingertips. This is the movement
used in ... fast detache.7 1
wherein the forearm rotates inward. The only exception occurs when the eraser
stroke is performed near the frog, in which case the third and fourth fingers must
The springing bow, or sautille, is a derivative of the fast detach e. "A rapid
movement with the eighth or sixteenth of the bow results in the springing bow
(sautille)."72 The eraser stroke becomes sautille when the position of the hand on
the bow is shifted. The hold changes to the "down-bow" position, wherein the
three inches above the balance point ofthe bow.7 3 If the trajectory of the bow were
"every stroke is vigorously accented at the start." 74 The thumb pinching the bow
against the fingers at the start of the stroke produces this accent. "The thumb
pressure is mostly against the first finger though the other fingers cooperate." 7 S To
prevent the hand from becoming tense, there should be "a scooping motion of the
hand" accompanying the pinch.7 6 This action depresses the bow, pressing the stick
towards the hair. "The stroke is achieved by releasing the "Pinch" and pulling fast
except, of course, for the direction of the hand." 77 The bow should not stop between
are: martele, spiccato, thrown bow, flying staccato, thrown staccato, and springing
staccato. 78 Accentuated legato and "firm staccato" are also derived from the
detache strokes.
The martele is essentially the same as the general accentuated detache, but
the bow stops between strokes. Because the hand stops the bow and resets the
pinching action, the martele stroke will usually sound stronger and more aggressive
"If the bow leaves the string during the pause between the strokes, the
martele becomes spiccato." 79 When the stroke is executed correctly, the bow will be
able to bounce naturally on its own, without any feeling of lifting the bow from the
string. The proper technique for spiccato is centered on Dounis's theme of balance:
The feeling in the hand must be one of a see-saw type of balance between the
first and fourth or first, third and fourth fingers. This see-saw process must
be accomplished with the fingers exclusively and not with the forearm. This
feeling in the fingers is required in order to have the bow spring back of its
own volition. One should never have the feeling of lifting the bow from the
string. 80
77 Constantakos, 45.
78 Dounis, Op. 12, 72.
79 Ibid., 7 4.
33
Playing this stroke in the lower half of the bow will allow for the most control over
bow, flying staccato, thrown staccato, and springing staccato. These strokes have
caused confusion for violinists throughout generations, as they are all based on the
principle of the natural bounce. A few precise distinctions exist between these four
strokes.
The thrown bow is a "spiccato with all the notes played with consecutive
French name: jete. The bow is dropped onto the string from above, while
tempo is controlled by how high the bow is allowed to rebound above the string
between bounces. The principal challenge with this stroke is to make the bounces
even and the rhythm steady within each down-bow and up-bow. Furthermore, the
stroke must be balanced between the down-bow and up-bow strokes, as the down-
bow has the assistance of gravity in its motion and is more easily executed. This
stroke is always begun from dropping the bow from above the string.
The flying staccato is essentially the same as the thrown bow, but it applies
only to the up-bow direction of the stroke (many consecutive up-bow spiccato
strokes). Unlike the thrown bow, flying staccato is begun with the bow on the
rebounding of the bow." 82 This stroke is also more commonly referred to by its
French name: "a ricochet". It is begun with one up-bow or down-bow stroke that
comes off the string, and is followed by two to four consecutive bounces in the
opposite direction. The speed of the ricochet is entirely dependent on the amount of
the thrown staccato. Dounis describes it as "a sort of perpetual thrown bow."83 This
(as in the thrown staccato) by the same number of bounces in the opposite
direction.
strokes within the accentuated detache. "During a legato stroke, parlando84 (talking
bow) is employed when you wish to enunciate special notes or rhythms in a phrase
without a definite break or pause between each note." 85 This enunciation, resulting
in the accented legato, is performed by the same pinching action as in all other
accentuated detache strokes. The difference is that it is performed while the bow is
moving on the string. In this stroke, the bow should not be stopped for the
accentuation. If the bow is stopped, the stroke becomes firm staccato (commonly
The proper technique for the firm staccato has perplexed violinists for
decades. In "The Staccato: Studies on a Scientific Basis for the Highest Development
Oftentimes when young students seek help with their staccato from their
teacher, their question is answered with some variation on "Do it like this,"
staccato, the question is dodged, passed along to another teacher, or answered with
rational and scientific study.B 9 This is not to say that instructions for staccato
playing did not previously exist. In "The Art of Violin Playing", Carl Flesch dedicates
several pages of suggested practice methods to achieve the proper technique for the
stroke. Flesch's leading suggestion for practice is "confinement to the upper quarter
of the bow, with the imaginary object of remaining so far as possible on the same
spot."90 Flesch goes on to suggest that if a violinist is unable to master the (firm)
staccato, the flying staccato may be used as a substitution, and he acknowledges that
the stroke is achieved regardless. " ... the arm is frequently twisted into the most
fantastic contortions ... there is turning of the stick, wavy arm movements, all this
approach to firm staccato. He believed that the staccato "is based primarily upon
the rational and thorough development of accentuation in every part of the bow."92
practice the martele stroke at the tip of the bow, where the stroke is easiest. After
these preparatory exercises, "the study of staccato proper is taken up, and here it is
the upper third of the bow, but "all other parts of the bow will persistently refuse to
produce anything but scratchy tones without the faintest effect of martele or
staccato."94 This is why Dounis believed that in order to be effective and bring the
desired results, the accentuation must be practiced in every part of the bow,
including the tip, middle, and frog (nut). "The cause of failure is that the
accentuation was not developed nor practiced at all in these parts, and the bow is
either too weak to accent or, on the contrary, exaggerated, non-balanced pressure is
used for accentuation." 95 Here again is the theme of balance permeating Dounis's
system.
Perhaps one of the most disputed issues of violin technique is the use of the
shoulder rest. Some see it as a vital tool, and absolutely necessary depending on a
player's anatomical structure (e.g. length of the neck, slope of the shoulders). Others
believe it is not only unnecessary to use a shoulder rest, but detrimental to one's
technique and quality of sound. As one who believed in playing the violin in the
most natural manner possible, Dounis did not encourage the use of a shoulder rest
("pad") with his students. The reasons for this are outlined by Valborg Leland:
93 Ibid.
94 Ibid.
95 Ibid., 247.
38
The violin must have free leverage to either side. With a pad there is a
tendency to hold the violin in one "set" place.
The pad tends to dampen the tone. There should not be anything between
you and the violin. The violin must be a part of you.
The arm is given a better chance for a natural position.
A better tone will result. 96
in part on his observation of great masters such as Heifetz, Kreisler, and Ysaye. Not
The left arm should be positioned at a 45° angle to the body, with the elbow
bent and the hand at the level of the shoulder. The forearm should rotate to the left
(supinate), causing the palm and fingers to turn as well. 97 Leland explains the
Place a pencil between the thumb and the first finger (the pencil should point
toward your nose). Turn the hand so that the other fingers fall on the pencil
in a parallel line with the first finger. Do not obtain this parallel line by
merely extending (straightening) the fingers to reach the pencil. The fingers
should remain in their original curved shape and the whole hand turns until
the three fingers touch the pencil and are on a parallel line with the first
finger. 98
The chin should rest lightly on the chin rest, without excessive pressure
resulting in tension in the neck The left shoulder should be lifted slightly. This way,
the shoulder supports the weight of the arm. 99 If the shoulder is not slightly lifted,
too much of the weight of the forearm and instrument is carried at the elbow joint,
resulting in less freedom and flexibility for shifting and in finger action. The chest
96 Leland, 39.
97 Constantakos, 35.
98 Leland, 39.
99 Ibid.
39
should always have the feeling of expansion. Contracting inward in the chest will
the first finger on the string (usually the A string), because the first finger is
strongest, followed by the second and third fingers. The placement of the fourth
finger on the string is often not introduced until the student has practiced with the
first three fingers for several weeks, since it is the shortest and presumably weakest
finger. In "The Art of Violin Playing", Carl Flesch indicates "the player who has a
long fourth finger will have to curve it when placing it on the string; while a finger
Dounis's method is exactly the opposite. He felt that because the fourth
finger is the shortest, the hand must accommodate its limitations. The shape of the
left hand must be determined by finding the most comfortable position for the
fourth finger to reach the strings. This way, the hand is positioned to help the
weakest finger, and not in a way to make it work harder than the rest of the fingers.
This concept relates to the theme of balance that permeates Dounis's ideas: The
fourth finger is significantly shorter than the rest, so the hand must be positioned in
Vibrato is not a skill that is usually taught to beginners. Most young students
play for at least one year before even being introduced to vibrato. Most teachers
believe that vibrato should not be taught until the student has a clear understanding
of how each finger should be placed on every string, and intonation is relatively
solid.
Once again, Dounis believed the opposite. He felt that the reason so many
violinists had trouble with their vibrato was because their left hand had been set up
in a way that was too rigid for vibrato to be executed effectively. If vibrato were
taught from the very beginning, the hand would develop habits around vibrato
technique. "Dounis believed in teaching vibrato from the early stages to ensure the
correct position of the hand and to free the arm of any tension." 101 By teaching
insures the free and correct function of the left hand and arm ... Through a
free vibrato, tension in the arm is eliminated. It conditions, from the start,
the most favourable position of the whole left arm for playing ... If the
position of the fingers and the relative position of the arm are not correct you
cannot have a good vibrato. It would be tight, jerky or uneven. 102
Vibrato is usually taught in three categories: arm, hand (or wrist), and finger
sustained playing. It is achieved by moving the forearm outward and inward at the
elbow, keeping the wrist in line with the forearm and allowing the finger to roll back
and forth with the tip of the finger remaining on the string. Ivan Galamian describes
The impulse, instead of coming from the hand, now comes from the forearm,
and, in this case also, the finger has to yield passively. The finger should be
firm enough to hold the string down and to retain its place on the string, but
flexible enough to submit to the motion of the arm. It must stretch and re-
curve with the backward and forward swing of the vibrato cycle. 10 3
Arm vibrato is generally taught first, before hand and finger vibrato, as it
Hand vibrato involves essentially the same process as arm vibrato, but the
forearm does not change position. In this case, the hand moves back and forth at the
wrist joint, while the finger rocks above and below the pitch.
When performing finger vibrato, the finger moves without the influence of
The impulse comes from the finger itself, which swings from its base knuckle
with the hand slightly yielding and moving passively in flexible response to
the finger action. This vibrato is smaller in width than the other types. 1os
103 Ivan Galamian, Principles of Violin Playing and Teaching (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.:
Prentice-Hall, 1962), 40.
104 Galamian, 38.
1os Ibid, 40.
42
For Dounis, there is only one kind of vibrato. His concept of vibrato could be
finger and/or wrist vibrato is quite different from the generally accepted Galamian
understand his concept of how the fingers should be placed on and lifted off the
Relating to his ideas on the passive down-bow and active up-bow, Dounis
believed that the downward placement of each finger on the string should be
passive, and the lifting of the finger off the string should be active. This concept
adheres to the law of gravity, yet many young students are taught that they must
force their fingers down to the string and press until it touches the fingerboard. Not
only is excessive pressure on the string unnecessary, it causes tension in the hand
that could lead to injury. In Carl Flesch's "The Art of Violin Playing", he exemplifies
Sarasate as having ideal finger action, stating that he "dropped his fingers so lightly
as if the fingers fall on the string of their own weight. 107 The lifting of the fingers off
the string is the active movement. It is not simply a vertical raise of the finger, but
more of a "snapping-back" of each finger from the knuckle, away from the strings. 10 B
These principles of vertical finger action relate only to slow playing with
43
sustained bow strokes. "Fast playing requires that the fingers stay close to the
strings, as in a very fast trill, touching the strings very lightly as if they were flitting
Dounis believed that "very strong finger pressure stifles the tone, which is
freed by an intense vibrato." 110 It is the vibrato furnishes the additional "weight"
necessary for achieving a pure tone. 111 The foundation of Dounis's vibrato begins
with understanding the physics of the strings. The strings are suspended over the
fingerboard, supported on either end by the nut and the bridge. If the string is
depressed towards the fingerboard and released, it will spring back to its original
position. When the finger is allowed to fall onto the string, without excessive
pressure, the finger will respond to the springing back of the string by rebounding
along with it. If the finger is truly relaxed, a slight oscillation of the fingertip will
result from this rebound. This oscillation is what Dounis called the "sizzle", and it is
The vibrato "starts in the finger tip and progresses to the wrist through the
hand."113 It is important that the impulse of this movement should feel as though it
comes from the fingertip, and not from the wrist itself. 114 Only if the finger, hand,
and wrist are in a completely relaxed state without any tension will the oscillation
Dounis developed the correct movement of the wrist with his students by
having them place the joint of the wrist in the third position, so that the wrist could
rest against the body of the violin. "Once you get it like that, it really breaks the
connection with your arm. You shouldn't feel anything in your arm at all." 11 5 In this
position, the forearm is unable to move at the elbow joint. This ensured that the
vibrato would be developed in a way that only the wrist, hand, and fingers would be
involved. Dounis believed that this relaxed approach was the only way to achieve a
"natural pulsation, not a stiff or forced addition to tone." 116 This pulsation of vibrato
shares the same qualities as the wrist action in the right hand for the fast sautille.
Dounis felt that changing to this finger-wrist technique could solve most of
the problems violinists tend to have with their vibrato. One of the most common
problems is a discontinuous vibrato. This is when a note begins and ends without
vibrato, but the middle of the note gets a quick wobble of vibrato. The result is an
uneven tone. Another common problem violinists have with vibrato is that it can be
unbalanced among the four fingers. The most typical example of this is a weak
fourth finger vibrato. It is not uncommon for a violinist play with a steady vibrato in
their first three fingers, and a sudden halt in the vibrato when playing with the
fourth finger.
45
finger action and vibrato are two sep arate techniques. As previously discussed, the
dropping of the fingers onto the strings correlates to the "sizzle" of vibrato. "Vibrato
had to start the instant you touched the strings. Continuous vibrato in every
finger." 117
Shifting
Shifting from one position to another along the fingerboard is the final
shifting used in slow playing is not the same as the type used for fast playing.118
Within these types of shifting there exist two different varieties: Using the last
finger of the starting position as the shifting finger (sometimes called the "Classical"
or "French"), and using the finger of the new position as the shifting finger
which kind should be used "depends entirely on the style and character of the music
In slow shifts to a higher position, the wrist flexes inward toward the body of
the violin; the wrist flexes outward toward the scroll when shifting to a lower
position. 121 "The wrist is the leader of the slow shift." 122 The hand should have the
impulse in the wrist towards the note we are going to. 123
During a shift in either direction, the shifting finger should not apply any
pressure on the string. The flexion of the wrist should cause a release of any finger
pressure. The finger should glide along the string as lightly as if it were playing a
harmonic. It should feel as though the fingertip is gliding along a rail (the string)
The thumb does not lead the shift, it merely follows the movement of the
hand. 125 "In an upward shift, the thumb must be ignored and be allowed to follow
the hand." 126 The thumb starts to go under the neck of the violin as the hand shifts
to higher positions. It continues in this direction with each higher position, until it
touches the end of the neck (sometimes called the "saddle"). For many violinists,
the thumb must continue to follow the hand past the saddle and along the upper
bout when shifting to very high positions. "In a downward shift the thumb at the
moment of shifting should feel that it detaches itself form the neck of the violin
without preceding the hand. In this way the feeling of balance in the hand is not
disturbed."1 27
vibrato be present form the beginning to the end of every note. This should not
must have continuous vibrato, and vibrato must begin again immediately upon
The new position is always reached with a decisive and snappy movement of
the finger. There must be a free vibrato on the first note of the new position.
It must feel as though the string is hot and the fingertip "sizzles" on the
string. 129
In any given position, the shape of the hand should not differ whether or not
the note was preceded by a shift. Intonation problems in higher positions are often
caused by the hand taking on an abnormal shape as the result of faulty shifting
technique. Leland says that Dounis would prevent this by having the student
take the new position 'cold', that is, without any preliminary preparation (no
shifting). Remember how the hand looks and feels when playing the note
"cold" and then shift form a lower position to this same note. It must look
and feel the same as when taken 'cold_l30
In fast shifting, the last finger played before the shift releases its pressure as
soon as possible after the note has sounded. There is no time to flex the wrist in fast
playing. Fast shifts are performed with the wrist in line with the forearm_131 "In the
fast playing there should not be any feeling of shifting at all; the fingers merely crawl
up and down the fingerboard." 132 In this way, the shifts should be inaudible.
into their teaching of violin technique, very few can adequately explain the
the techniques described above. What's more is that although many teachers may
execute these techniques naturally, it is not what they were taught. In turn, teachers
don't always teach what they do, they instead teach what they think they are
49
CHAPTER THREE
DOUNIS: THE TEACHER
Although his published works focus entirely on the physiology of violin playing,
those who knew him as a teacher can attest to his appreciation for expressive
concern for the direction in which the art of violin playing seemed to be heading. In
the 1930s, Dounis felt that the general style of playing was getting "paler". 133 He
growing obsession with perfect intonation. Sound recordings had also triggered a
wave of copycat violinists, who tried to mimic the sound and interpretations of the
early recordings of Kreisler, Heifetz, Ysaye, and many other great violinists. As a
result, players were becoming "less oriented toward developing their unique sounds
and musical personality." 134 George Neikrug says: "He wanted to bring back the era
Expressive Technique
believed that "in order to express, one must overcome the barriers posed by
133 George Neikrug, interview by author, Concord, MA, May 11, 2011.
13 4 Byron Duckwall, "Developing the Musical Personality," Master the Cello,
http:/ jwww.masterthecello.com/ dounis-1 01/ developing-musical-personality
(accessed August 15, 2012).
135 George Neikrug, interview by author, Concord, MA, May 11, 2011.
50
technique."136 All too often, violinists are limited in their musical expression
because of their inability to physically produce what they would like to hear.
metronome marking of J .= 120 (or one measure per second). Many violinists will
never achieve this tempo, because their technique for fast playing is
underdeveloped in both the left and right hands. Dounis's technique for fast playing
is different for both hands from the technique for slow playing (See Chapter 2: "Fast
Detache" and "Shifting"). In contrast, the typical method of practice for violinists in
the coda of the Saint-Saens is to play it slowly, gradually increasing the tempo over
time. George Neikrug analogizes the ineffectiveness of this approach: "You can walk
as fast as you can, but until you change the technique, a walk will never be a run."138
Although most violinists would never deliberately choose to play the coda of the
Saint-Saens under the suggested tempo, most settle for a slower tempo due to the
;If JJ?Rhrffrr 1~§ 1f[frr [Fffr FI['rtfr fcf frr rIiJJ J1J I tfU I
Shifting positions is another aspect of technique that, if underdeveloped, can
"Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso" involves two upward arpeggios (See Example
2). The first arpeggio (in A minor) climbs up to an FS that could either be played in
first position on the E string, or in third position on the A string. The second
arpeggio (in F major) goes to an AS, which could again either be played on theE or A
string. In order to keep the dynamic range within the indicated pianissimo, and also
in consideration of the darker color the A string provides, most violinists prefer to
shift up on the A string for these two gestures. Those who do not shift and choose to
stay in first position, playing the top of the gestures on the (much brighter
sounding) E string, may do so out of artistic opinion. More often, however, the
choice is made to stay in a lower position because quick shifting is just more
difficult, and this choice is based on the limitations of the technique, rather than the
the risk of inaccurate intonation due to a poor shift is much higher. Dounis pupil
52
.. .it was not a matter of going from one note to another ... there was a reason
for making the physical motion of gliding and pulling your finger from one
note to another. .. There were connections and when you put notes together,
you would start to think of it in connection with music, making phrases_139
For Dounis, proper technique was simply the ability to play what you hear
inside your head without a problem. Dounis pupil Sylvan Schulman says: "You
cannot use your musicality if you cannot express yourselftechnically." 140 Just as the
great masters of violin impacted Dounis's technical theories of playing, his idea of
Expressive Technique was largely influenced by having seen and heard the playing
of Eugene Ysaye. "[Ysaye] had a tremendous flair. Technique never got in the way of
the music for him." 141 By gaining the proper technique, there would be no
in any way desired, allowing for a performer's true intentions to be heard through
the music.
above, he despised the formulaic style that was on the rise due to the influence and
53
growing availability of audio recordings. Dounis's primary concern in teaching was
individual voice will come out." 143 The fundamental concept of expressive
technique is that your musical idea should be so well developed in your mind that it
can be transferred to your hands. Your hands then play the instrument, which
projects your idea. "The bow is an extension of my hand. The bow is projecting my
touch." 144
ideas, Dounis would have them sing the music before playing it. He believed that in
order to know exactly how one wanted to play a phrase, the music needed to be
played by the body's natural instrument: the voice. Eichen believes that his own
The violin is always just your voice outside of your body ... For him the
concept behind everything was the idea of making beautiful music, playing
beautifully, not just physically beautifully, but to be able to express music ...
He told me when you phrase, phrase like a singer - phrase it where you
would stop to breathe.14S
instrument: "Every instrument is in some way based on the human voice, just like
almost every machine is derived from the mechanics of the human body. [Dounis]
always said, 'Sing it, and then you can play it."'146
After singing the phrase, Dounis would have students play what they had just
sung. He would them have them analyze what they had played.
He said, "What did you sing, that you did not play?" The student would
respond, then he said, "What did you play that you did not sing?" Finally he
said, "Now sing it again, with even more expression." They kept repeating
the process until the playing matched the singing.147
understanding of one's own individual expressive ideas. Dounis believed that the
students' awareness of their own "voice print". On the technical side, students were
being told to play in ways that were unnatural for their bodies. As a result, students
were forced to concentrate on the technique of playing a phrase, rather than how
they would like to musically express a phrase. On the expressive side, students
were being influenced by the increasing availability of audio recordings. They now
influence was causing students not to trust their own musical instincts. By having
students sing the music, they were forced to think for themselves about how they
expression." 14B Eventually, the transfer of the inner voice from the brain to the
instrument would happen naturally, without having to first sing the music.
expected his students to have memorized the music before ever playing for him in a
technique and expression, rather than reading the music. However, Dounis's ideal
memorization process did not just concern the score. The practice of memorizing
Dounis believed that it was necessary to always be able to clearly picture the
score in one's mind at any point while playing. In order to achieve this clarity, he
had his students look at a few bars at a time, without playing. Then they had to close
their eyes and say, out loud, what they could remember. The next step was to write
it out on manuscript paper. This process was repeated until an entire section of the
score (e.g. the exposition of a sonata movement) could be written out without any
mistakes. Dounis believed that through this process, the visualization of the score
students to aurally memorize their own interpretation of the music. This meant
for each phrase. By developing the ability to sing the entire composition with
Dounis believed that, through this process, the student would be able to explore his
or her own inner voice and find their "voice print" on the piece. "The idea is to
memorize your interpretation. This requires you to be aware of all the details of
your inner voice ... noticing all the nuances of your singing." 15 Z George Neikrug
attests to the benefits of this technique: "It exercised the memory like a muscle from
the very beginning, and you got an interpretation right away, so it is not a tacked-on
interpretation." 153
memorizing all the movements of the arms, hands, and fingers required to
technically play the music. This practice is achieved by creating a very clear image
in the mind of the correct way to perform every movement the technique requires.
"The stronger the mental image, the better it is going to be." 154 This idea of creating
a mental picture of every movement is integral to Dounis's theory that the mind
Considering that the majority of modern violinists know little more of Dounis
than a few of his published works, it is only natural that Dounis is often categorized
Scientific Basis for the Young Violinist; Violin Player's Daily Dozen, etc.), all of which
suggest that Dounis was merely the author of exercise books. Those who worked
personally with Dounis can attest to his passion for helping his students play with
the utmost expression, not just with proper technique. George Neikrug says that
The only time he ever got mad at me he said, "Never play an indifferent note!"
Everything about him was about how to get more expression, how to be
more artistic, how to be a great performer.155
Teaching Methods
Dounis's training in the medical field impacted not only his technical theories
but also his approach to the art of teaching. His style of teaching was largely
his teaching. Each student was taught as an individual, as each student would come
to him with unique problems. "He would go to the root of the problem that he found
in your playing, and the exercises were designed to solve them. This was like a
prescription a doctor was writing." 156 Dounis was also concerned with the brain's
in short durations, and coached his students in how to effectively practice. But
perhaps where his knowledge of the human brain mattered most was in his
analytical method of observation in their own playing. "He worked to develop the
playing the violin: sensitizing of the mind; heightening the awareness of what the
body is doing; and strengthening the control of the mind over actions.158 Sensitizing
performance. Fritz Kreisler, on whose playing Dounis based much of his method,
Technic to me is a mental and not a manual thing. The technic thus achieved,
a technic whose controlling power is chiefly mental... is more or less
dependent on the state of the artist's nervous system. Yet it is the one and
only kind of technic that can adequately and completely express the
musician's every instinct, wish and emotion.1 59
introduction to The Artist's Technique of Violin Playing, Op. 12, Dounis writes on the
the sensations associated with the movement of the arms, hands, and fingers must
be memorized down to every detail. Dounis believed that before any movement, a
Fingers, Op. 15, contains two volumes of exercises that require every finger to move
horizontal movement of the 1 st and 4th fingers (chromatic movement on the string),
vertical movement of the 2nd finger ("falling" movement), and left to right movement
of the 3rct finger (pizzicato). The fundamental exercise is complicated, but not
impossible for most seasoned violinists. The modifications that follow, however, are
challenging for most and impossible for some (Example 4), requiring more rapid
160 D.C. Dounis, The Artist's Technique of Violin Playing, Op. 12 (New York, Carl
Fischer, 1921) 4.
161 Constantakos, 33.
162 Dounis The Absolute Independence of the Fingers, Op. 15 Book II (1924) in The
60
Example 3: D.C. Dounis, The Absolute Independence of the Fingers, Op. 15, Book II
Section B, Third Fundamental Exercise
THIRD FUNDAMENTAL EXERCISE
(\ 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 2
fJ
.IL
r
0
~·r-
1--1
f r 4--4--4
I"' i r 1--t
r
tJ I I I I I I I I
+B + + +
8
+
3
+
3
+:r +
B
3 3
Example 4: D.C. Dounis, The Absolute Independence of the Fingers, Op. 15, Book II
Section B, Modifications 1-3 on the Third Fundamental Exercise
NINETEEN MODIFICATIONS
fJ 0
® 0202 020202020202 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 202
.. ..
·~ ?~,rr· . [.[U r .llf.l' .. .. ..
#r · r r .. T. r • .IL • .IL •
Dounis Collection: Eleven Books ofStudies for the Violin, (New York: Carl Fischer,
2005), 109-174.
61
Dounis believed that the complete independence of the fingers of the left
feel that attempting these exercises does more harm than good to their technique.
This could be true, if Dounis's concept of allowing the hand to relax naturally is not
applied. This feat requires concentration on his three principles of mind over body:
sensitizing of the mind; heightening the awareness of what the body is doing, and
strengthening the control of the mind over actions. The theory is exemplified in
these exercises. "He devised exercises, which at first glance seem impossible. By
retaining a relaxed, balanced hand and by developing strong mental pictures of the
manageable." 163
When you are concentrating like that, it's impossible to get nervous. If
you're not thinking positively all the time, you're open to a negative feeling.
Instead of thinking, "I have to do this, I have to do that.," you think "Maybe
I'm not good enough, maybe I don't sound good." The more details you have,
you haven't got time to think about yourself. And that's what nervousness is.
It's the inverted ego. After I learned to concentrate like that, I never got
nervous or tense when I'd perform. It didn't matter what I was playing_164
These mental images are stored in the mind, and kept on reserve, so that the
next time a piece is played, all the violinist has to do is execute them. Fritz Kreisler
also felt that the development of mental images was essential to controlling
picture, a sort of 'master record.' It should be a matter of will power to which the
Once a player has learned to sensitize the mind, heighten awareness of what
the body is doing, and strengthen the control of the mind over actions, practicing
becomes very different from the hours of repetition that so many musicians subject
themselves to every day. Dounis describes his concept of "bad practice" in The
To know how to practice was an art. Most violinists believe that the solution
of the problem of "How to Practice" lies in repeating, every day, various
finger exercises, scales, arpeggios, bow exercises, etc. But this supposition is
a fallacy. No one will ever learn how to practice by repeating day in, day out,
finger exercises, scales, or, in fact the whole compendium of daily exercises
for the violin. The result of such monotonous and arid study is usually
worthless. This procedure explains why after years of intensive study, there
are few violinists, very few indeed, who acquire an infallible technique. 166
Practice requires brain power. If Dounis's principles of mind over body are applied,
a player could achieve the result of a week's worth of repetition in one hour. Dounis
wanted his students to understand what was wrong with their playing rather than
repeating the same mistakes again and again. "Repetitions can reinforce problems,
Dounis also believed that the separation made between practice and
play his or her best in performance, it was due to the fact that their method of
prepared for performance without having practiced with this goal in mind." 168
Most violinists begin their practice with warm -ups consisting of exercises and
scales, or they will repeat a passage of their repertoire slowly again and again. This
Dounis believed that the day's practice should always begin with a
you should always start your day with a real performance, with a lot of expression.
Do the exercises later, instead of doing scales and warm-ups first." 1 69 Dounis
advocated that his students should be able to play their repertoire without a warm-
up. If the mind is alert, prepared and able to control the fingers, any other exercise
is merely useless rituaJ.1 70 Most violinists have a different attitude toward practicing
than they have toward performing. Even when running through repertoire during
practice, most will stop and try to fix technical or expressive issues as they arise. To
him, the brain is too much at ease when the player doesn't practice with the same
performance mindset was the only way to accurately evaluate how one might play
168 Constantakos, 30
169 George Neikrug, interview by author, August 28, 2012.
170 Constantakos, 30.
64
mindset by not stopping to try to fi x anything, Dounis insisted that his students
remember every detail that went wrong. These problems were to be isolated and
fixed later in the day.17 1 This way of practicing significantly improves the brain's
power of concentration. Over time there will be fewer and fewer problems to fix
evident in his psychological approach to teaching. George Neikrug says, "He was
always good at reducing complexity to simplicity." 172 One way that Dounis achieved
this simplicity was by asking his students questions that would cause them to
examine the problems on their own. "He questioned you in such a way that made
you feel you had discovered [the answer]." 1 73 Dounis would also speak in half-
sentences, allowing the student to finish the statement. This method of teaching
answer questions and finish sentences, drawing on their instincts. Dounis believed
that information would be best understood and retained if the student was made to
students only fragments of the answers to their problems, he left it to them to bridge
the gaps in their own way. Claus Adams remarks on Dounis's idea of developing the
brain as a muscle:
171 Duckwall.
1 72George Neikrug, interview by author, August 28, 2012.
173 Louis Kievman, quoted in Constantakos, 31.
65
process. Other teachers gave you fingerings, or [you] imitated [their] sound,
slide, phrase, it always was from the outside in. Dounis was the first that
instilled principles on which you could build.174
their playing. He often wrote unique exercises for each student. His advice was
never identical from one student to the next, because every student had particular
weaknesses and strengths. 175 Dounis pupil and luthier William Carboni comments
methods:
part of whether or not the experience will be fulfilling for both. The teacher has to
be patient, and the student has to be trusting. The relationship between teachers
and students of any instrument often becomes more personal than in other fields.
success for a student is shared with the utmost satisfaction by the teacher.
that was positively influenced by his knowledge of psychology. Most students have
point in their career. This is oftentimes the reason young students give up on
playing their instrument. They always feel frustrated, never feel encouraged, and
usually think it is just too difficult for them. Claus Adams says that this was never
the case with Dounis: '"'With certain teachers you would come out feeling not sure
good. I always learned something I could depend on." 177 George Neikrug elaborates
on the emotional effects of his lessons with Dounis: "No matter how depressed I was
going in to the lesson, I would come out feeling like I could conquer the world. He
never blamed you or made you feel like it was your fault for your problems."178
would seek out only for specific technical problems. But as previously discussed, his
technique was entirely based on expression and sound. His method was not purely
mechanical, and his teaching was far from impersonal. His background in physical
and psychological medicine gave him the basis for his technique and teaching style,
but his personality was not calculated. He was simply charismatic in character and
Any violinist who hopes to achieve a high level of playing will study with
several different teachers in his or her lifetime. Most teachers have both strengths
and weaknesses within their pedagogy. Some are predominantly technicians, while
others focus solely on the music itself. Moreover, while some teachers play with a
Likewise, a teacher who plays with great expression may not be able to help a
student desperately wants the teacher to see the potential in his or her playing.
Having studied and practiced for many years, the student is now technically
The last thing any student such wants to hear from a new teacher are possibly the
most dreaded words in all violin pedagogy: "Let's talk about your bow hold."
The vast majority of violin students have had to make changes to their
technique in some way during their career. Successful change in technique depends
in large part on the willingness of the student to learn, and the ability of the teacher
to communicate what needs to change and why. But even if these two elements are
in violin playing involves altering motor function in one way or another. Physical
69
habits that have been previously formed need to be broken, and habit change is one
obstacle in learning a different technique. This resistance is the primary reason why
Dounis's method has not had the following that it might have, and why Dounis's
former students have had such difficulty passing his principles along to the next
generation of violinists. This chapter will explore the reasons why physical habits
are difficult to change, as well as the psychological effects that attempted habit
physical habits, even the simple act of dressing oneself would be as difficult every
day as it was when first attempted as a child. Once the physical idiosyncrasies have
been created, the mind is free to deal with more important things_180 This is
especially true in playing any instrument: The mind pushes any aspect that can be
The tissues in the human body are capable of being modified through
repeated use. Through this modification, the same movement becomes easier each
repeated (which becomes a habit), instead of a different movement taking its place
180 George Herbert Betts, The Mind and its Education (Toronto: Copp, Clark Co.,
1997), 56.
70
each time.181 French psychologist and philosopher Leon Dumont first explained the
It is not only the muscle tissue that becomes molded with repeated
movement, but also, more importantly, the nervous tissue. The tissue of the nervous
system (brain, spinal chord, nerves) is the most sensitive and most easily molded of
all the bodily tissues. Currents modify the structure of a nerve, whether they are
sensory currents from external influences, or motor currents, which run from the
brain to the muscle. The nerve becomes modified, just as the muscle tissues are, so
gradually rendered unnecessary. A habit left to itself without attention will become
more and more imprinted in the brain and muscles. In fact, once a physical habit is
firmly formed, applying active attention to the movement can actually inhibit the
execution, and can make the movement seem more difficult. Psychologist and
A good illustration of what I mean is found in the way some play tennis. At
first every act is a voluntary act directed by the mind. The playing is
awkward and ineffective. Finally, the drives, the lobs, and the cuts become
more or less habitual, and can be performed much better without conscious
attention to every move than with it. And thus far habit is necessary and
desirable. 185
The process of habituation is the same in learning to play the violin, and is
even accelerated because of the age at which most start to learn. The vast majority
of professional violinists begin learning to play when they are children, and most
under the age often. "Childhood and youth is the great time for habit forming. Then
the brain is plastic and easily molded, and it retains its impressions more
indelibly ... "186 For example, when a child first learns to hold the bow, it is awkward
and difficult for the first few weeks or sometimes months, depending on the child.
The child has to think every time about where each finger should go, and how it
should be shaped. The hand is not yet accustomed to the weight of the bow, or
finding the balance of the bow. Eventually it becomes habit, and the bow hold
becomes automatic every time. Ideally, this is how all the shapes and movements of
playing the violin should be learned. The danger is that the wrong shapes or
stage. At this point it becomes a learned error or "bad habit" and is much more
72
difficult to eradicate because it is no longer under conscious control. This is when
formed, a habit cannot be modified until attention is reinstituted. 1B7 Betts attests
that the varying degrees of technical prowess in tennis playing are contingent upon
Only the few go on, and these last are the champions. They are the ones who
make use of habit just as other do, but who constantly direct their attention
to improving their drives and lobs and cuts, and so do not fall into a rut and
continue playing season after season no better this than last. Mere repetition
will form habit, but the habit formed will not be an intelligent habit, and
hence will lead to stagnation.188
This may also be the case in the varying levels of technical virtuosity in violin
playing, but it would seem more likely that technical prowess was firmly established
for the most extraordinary virtuosos (Kreisler, Ysaye, Heifetz, etc.) from a young
age. When Heifetz first began studying with Leopold Auer as a child, Auer wrote to
German manager Herman Ferrow, "He is only eleven years old, but I assure you that
this little boy is already a great violinist. I marvel at his genius, and I expect him to
become world-famous and make a great career. In all my fifty years of violin
and this is where Betts' theory about champion tennis players applies. With the
right teacher and the willingness to learn, a change in technical habits can be
achieved and improvement can be made. This process of physical habit change is
When it comes to most violinists' technique, there are aspects that work, and
aspects that do not work as well. For example, a teacher may find that a change in
the bow hold is necessary for one student, while accepting the vibrato of the same
student as technically satisfactory. In this case, the bow hold is given a great deal of
attention until the problem is fixed and the new habits are in place. The process can
take months of careful, attentive, and mentally exhausting practice. This is the kind
of technical change that most students will experience at some point in their career,
The struggle that comes with technical habit change is likely the biggest
factor in why Dounis's method did not have the mainstream impact that other
methods (namely Flesch's and Galamian's) have had. This is because the
from any other method of the time. The principle of finding the body's instinctual
shapes and movements and applying those to the instrument was unheard of at a
time when teachers were dictating what they thought should be the exact shape of
each finger, hand, and arm. The development of the Suzuki method in the mid-
74
wider and younger audience. 19 0 Just as Dounis believed the playing was becoming
Many students sought the help of Dounis because they were looking for a
solution to a specific technical problem. What they would learn after only one
lesson was that while Dounis could help them resolve their issues, the philosophy
true pupil of Dounis, the entire technique would need to be broken down and
rebuilt. Most were understandably skeptical, as they were being told that although
certain elements of their technique were working, there was a better and more
efficient way. In order to learn the method, extreme physical habit change would be
necessary.
the brain called proactive interference. Proactive interference is the "forgetting [of
information] due to interference from the traces of events or learning that occurred
1 90 Although the Suzuki Method was never intended to qualify as a school of violin
technique (i.e. French and Russian), its popularity and systematic approach to
teaching the instrument have resulted in certain technical features being referred to
as "Suzuki technique" (i.e. standing with the right foot facing forward and the left
foot turned slightly outward, or the right thumb being bent in the bow grip).
1 9 1 A.W. Still, "Proactive Interference and Spontaneous Alternation in Rats,"
protecting your habits . This occurs when past memories (in the case of technique,
Because of proactive interference, our old habits creep back in as soon as the
new habit is not given adequate attention. When a violinist is trying to adopt a
accustomed to having a loose wrist that extends (wrist down) at the tip of the bow,
it will be very difficult for the brain and body to accept Dounis's flexed wrist from
which the hand hangs and carries the bow all the way to the tip. Because there are
many processes occurring in the brain while playing and practicing (i.e. reading or
relatively easy for the attention to slip away from executing the new technique.
physically more comfortable than the new technique, but because by reverting to
the automatic shapes and movements, the brain is allowed to focus on the other
new technique in order for physical habit change_to begin to take effect. Yet even
technique. The same is true for athletes when trying to change or improve their
technique. Despite proper coaching and intensive training, there is often a poor
transfer of learning from skill drills (the athletic equivalent of technical exercises for
Athletes often seem to improve during training and skill drills, but they
become confused, make errors, and appear to forget what they have learned
when left to their own devices, as in hard training and in the heat of
competition. They repeatedly fall back to their old incorrect ways and fail to
improve or improve only very slowly_195
The element of comfort and ease associated with the old technique is what
leads to emotional factors in habit change. It is very difficult for a violinist to accept
that there could be a better way to play than what he or she has always done,
especially if a certain level of success has already been reached. This is why many of
Dounis's pupils who were already successful musicians (i.e. Joseph Silverstein and
William Primrose) only sought the help of Dounis for solutions to specific technical
problems, rather than to reconstruct their entire way of playing (as was the case
195 Yuri Hanin and Muza Hanina, "Optimization of Technique in Elite Athletes: An
Application of the ICC Program," in Connecting Paradigms of Motor Behaviour to
Sport and Physical Education (Tallin, Estonia: Tallinn University Press, 2010),
139-140.
77
with George Neikrug). The process of changing even just one aspect of technique
can muster feelings of disappointment, frustration, self-doubt, and the fear of losing
state.
placed on self-analysis in the process of habit change parallels current habit change
("performance optimization") methods for athletes. For example, the ICC Program
developed by social and sport psychologist Dr. Yuri Hanin and sports coach and
physical education specialist Muza Hanina at the Research Institute for Olympic
Sports in Finland organizes the process of habit change into three components:
especially intended for use in sports in which a repeated movement determines the
success or failure of the athlete (i.e. javelin, shot put, high jump, running).
reporting the components of their movement patterns. 198 This step parallels
Dounis's concept of sensitizing the mind and heightening awareness of what the
a student to grasp, especially when the movement has become automatic over time.
To help his students with this, Dounis would have them play the same passage
twice, and then assess which attempt was better. "He would say, 'What did you do
differently?' I wouldn't always know. I could maybe point out one or two things that
I'd done differently with my shifting, or my vibrato. Then he would list ten or more
what is today called the Alexander Technique in the early twentieth century. The
Alexander Technique teaches the identification of harmful habits that have built up
over a lifetime of stress, and eradicates them in order to allow more freedom of
movement and to decrease the likelihood of injury. zoo While the technique has a
long history of helping musicians to perform with less stress, its benefits are not
necessarily parallel Dounis's method, the related concepts of physical habit change
are congruent. The first step is to achieve physical awareness. "If a person can be
made aware of his muscular movements as a whole, and learn to distinguish their
general, overall pattern, he can make constructive changes and corrections on the
basis of knowledge rather than trial and error." 202 In breaking out of the habits that
have become automatic through the molding of nervous and muscle tissues,
physical activity at a time, an awareness of the relationship between that aspect and
the body as a whole must always been present. "To use the figure of the spotlight
and stage again, this time the spot is still bright but the stage is merely dim instead
of blacked out."20 4
Returning to the ICC program, the second stage correlates with this concept
of awareness versus focus. During the control and monitoring stage, the athlete
learns to deliberately control the process of task execution. 205 In this stage, the
athlete involves the deliberate and step-by-step practice of the entire chain of
optimal movement patterns from the first component to the last component of the
chain for any given task. Here the goal of training is for the athlete to attempt to
improve only the first component in the chain. At the same time it is estimated how
this improvement affects other components of the chain and the final result. 206 This
stage is comparable to Dounis's concept of strengthening the mind's control over the
203 Frank Pierce Jones, "The Organization of Awareness," in Collected Writings on the
Alexander Technique.
204 Ibid.
205 Davids, 59.
206 Baxter et al., 137.
81
body's actions. A large component of this stage of Dounis's method is the
The most significant similarity between the ICC method and Dounis's method
is the importance of perceiving the differences between the old (erroneous) way
and the new (more effective) way. To solidify the connection between the body and
mind in perceiving these differences, Dounis would have his students deliberately
exaggerate the old way of doing something. For example, as discussed in Chapter 2,
in his method the first finger should have a feeling of being released from the bow
grip when a down-bow is initiated. Contrary to this idea, many violinists have the
habit of keeping their first finger firm and stiff on the bow in both directions. "He
would have you do it five or ten times the old way, exaggerating what you were
doing wrong. That way you really understood what it felt like to do it wrong."Z07
Dounis would then have his students exaggerate the new way, by completely
releasing the first finger off of the bow as the down-bow is initiated, and releasing
the fourth finger as the up-bow begins. In this way, a very clear connection is made
between the hand and the brain of what feels right and what feels wrong. The ICC
Program recognizes the important role of prior experience and a need to cope with
awareness of both the old way (an error) and new way (correct pattern).zos
athlete corrects habitual and random errors and manages radical changes of
strengthening the mind's control over the actions of the body. Once the new, more
effective way of doing something has been defined and compared with the old,
erroneous way, the violinist must always focus the attention on executing the task in
playing and contemporary research in sports psychology and coaching illustrate the
the theories explored in sport psychology research are applicable to any task that
requires a repeated action. The contemporary research associated with the ICC
Program in many ways substantiates Dounis's ideas on habit change from the first
and Muza Hanina at the Research Institute for Olympic Sports and Dounis's teaching
is that both athletes and violinists develop their own vocabulary to describe their
movement patterns. 21 0 The benefit of using the athlete's or violinist's own words,
Glazier, 59.
2 09
21 0
Alan MacPherson and Dave Collins, "Optimization of Performance in Top- Level
Athletes: An Action-Focused Coping: A Commentary," International journal of Sports
Science & Coaching 4, no. 1 (2009): 67-70.
83
not just those of the coach or teacher, is that this results in a shared language
between both parties. Dounis nurtured the development of this lexicon by asking
open-ended questions, or allowing the student to finish his sentences. He could then
communicate more effectively with the student about his or her movement patterns
all-important first step. "A sport psychologist and a coach cannot change the
athlete; she must make the change herself. Although a strong belief in the
and improvement is required." 211 In one case study, a javelin thrower was hesitant
to participate in the study because she had no problem with her technique during
training. Because there was no problem in her practice, she saw no real need to
change anything. The consistent error in her technique appeared only during the
stress of competition.
competitions made her ambivalent about the need for correction. When everything
was going well, she saw no need to change, but the recollection of problems during
competition gave her the feeling that she would like to change her habits. 212
reason why violin students are generally resistant to technical change, whether it is
ideas behind Dounis's method of playing are so different from the indoctrinated
Suzuki method), this resistance is augmented when faced with such a wide-scale
technical overhaul. George Neikrug says, "No one likes to be told they've been
doing something wrong their whole life." 213 Neikrug says that the resulting
resistance to habit change is often then intensified by the egotism that is embedded
in violinists who have already reached a certain level of success doing things the
"old way". If the motivation to change is not wholly present, little will be
difficulty is a result of the molding of the muscle fibers. Perhaps most importantly,
habit change is difficult on the emotional level. Dounis attended to each of these
levels with his students to facilitate the process of habit change. Despite the lack of
documentation by Dounis himself, his students' written and oral testimonies reveal
that in terms of Dounis's ideas on and methods for addressing habit change, Dounis
213 George Neikrug, Interview by author, Concord, MA, July 28, 2011
85
are perhaps now more valuable than ever. Throughout the world, orchestras can
now afford to be hyper selective in their hiring from a pool of extremely qualified
competitive, and the struggle to succeed within the institutions is trying for most.
At a time when music seems to be more a business than an art form, Dounis's
your own voice, self-analyzing your technique to find deficiencies, and addressing
these issues through finding your own unique and natural shapes and movements
students. For Dounis, complete expressive freedom was always the primary goal. A
86
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