By Paul Stein: However personal or intimate it may feel to play something like Brahms or Debussy, music is an experience in which we communicate with each other. It follows that string players must learn the gentle and complex art of leading each other. The motion of the upbeat, the overt, sudden facial gestures, and the shared feeling from one to another are all part of the choreography of leading and signaling.Leading and Multi-tasking
Unfortunately, giving the upbeat isnt as easy as it looks. If your mind is on the music you played a moment ago, and not on the upbeat thats about to happen, you won't have enough presence of mind to pull it off. Each intervening beat and musical thought matters.
Fortunately, certain exercises can improve the technique and make the task of leading easier.
Because violin playing involves contrary motions of the right arm and the left fingers, and because the fluidity of music has a rather complex relationship with the beat and with a metronome, its no surprise that many string players find it difficult to give a pick-up.
Knowing what the pick-up looks like gives the player an image to re-create. It starts the imagination. I remember seeing on youTube one of the concertmasters of the Berlin Philharmonic, who had the grace of a fireplug. He moved very quickly and simply, straight up and down, yet with the effectiveness of an assured, rhythmic machine. Leading has many faces, some beautiful, others strong and Neanderthal. Its not necessary to look like Baryshnikov. Musical communication can be just as helpful with either approach.
The other main ingredient for leading is that both arms need to move independently and inter-dependently. If they fight each other and adversely affect each other, the body will be too knotted up to effectively lead.
Starting With a Simple Pick-Up
If signaling and lifting the violin and the bow in a synchronized motion causes confusion, and if the rhythm loses its cohesiveness, here are three suggestions:

- Some awkward pick-ups dont have enough height and drop. In other words, they barely move. Visualize how much space the pick-up needs to fill. To give it both the bounce and the height, imagine bouncing a basketball, with the floor at the level of your neck, and the highest point at your nose. The trajectory and physics of bouncing a basketball remarkably resemble a musical pick-up. The continuum of the beats completing their full pulse, one after another, and the speed and inevitability with which they operate, find their counterparts in the bouncing of balls and jumping on a trampoline.
- If the speed of the pick-up is exaggerated or stilted, it helps to understand that the appearance and speed of the pick-up isnt an exact replication of the speed of the music itself. The pick-up may look much faster, or much slower than the music. If the player shows a super fast, overly excited signal, hes making the understandable mistake of over-reacting to the exciting, fast music. This is a good example of something that happens often in music: following ones intuition. Music has a way of tricking the mind. Its often better to be counter-intuitive. Heres an exercise to help the player appreciate the various ways one beat can be interpreted: With the pulse in mind, move the arm as if youre conducting. Make the movement as smooth as possible, with the perfect trajectory of a rainbow. With the exact same pulse, now begin the movement faster to indicate a louder dynamic, and then finish the movement with a slower gesture. Try the same thing with the bow. Youll see how fast bow movements and slow beats go very well together. Its part of the vivid, rich language of rhythm, and it nicely illustrates one of the more exciting and interesting aspects of music. Of course, such movement-time relativity can be frustrating while learning it for the first time, but when its mastered it makes it easier to lead. Quickly lifting the violin and dropping it back down does not seem so awkward anymore when you know that fast movements and slow music can go together.
- Upbeats can travel in a myriad of directions, but theyre still merely tightly packaged pendulums. In the hands of former Chicago Symphony maestro Fritz Reiner, each was a tiny flick of the baton accompanied by a controlled stare, which left little doubt as to where the beat was.
- There is a moment before the bottom of the beat happens, a time for the mind to focus on when the pulse will reach its moment of impact, its destination. Known as the pulse prep, its absence leads to a continuum of rushing.
- The top of the beat has a momentary lull, or transition, which allows the movement to change direction and get ready for the next beat.
- The actual impact of the beat should be felt, either subtly as in Pierre Boulezs style, or architecturally robust as in Georg Soltis.