| hmm a possibility is an overly tense wrist and stiff right shoulder. Try to loosen up, but this comes with time.
Also, watch your posture when you bow, try not to hunch too forward to get "comfortable" and a stronger tone...instead of pushing on the strings with applied weight, try to use more of the natural arm weight, this helps to relax your arm too. But using arm weight seems a little easier when you sit - I don't usually stand to play.
These are just possibilities...I actually play French, but bouncy bows might come from stiffness, no matter the style. Hope others can help you out too.
What piece are you playing that requires quick successive down bows? Is it orchestral? I wonder if there's a musical reason for doing that, and how quick the bowing needs to be. If the downbows are to accent each note, then try to to dig in just a little to start off the string. Then retake the bow to play close to the frog again - it might help to reduce the bouncing. Cos If you keep doing down bows and stopping the bow after every note, and you keep moving up towards the tip of the bow with each successive note, while using the same pressure, it'll probably bounce. You've got to compensate different pressures for different regions of the bow. Hope you understand what I'm going on about.
YMMV.
Last edited by Klimbim : 01-22-2002 at 11:18 AM.
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