About articulation

 

“A term denoting the degree to which each of a succession of notes is separated in performance; it may lie at either of the extremes of staccato and legato, or anywhere between the two.”[1]

 

“The way successive notes are joined to one another in performance. Opposite kinds of articulation are staccato (detached) and legato (smooth).”[2]

 

 

The above mentioned definitions of articulation seem clear-cut, yet the technical implications for players of various kinds of instruments or vocalists are wide-ranging. String players are dealing with bowing, singers with text, keyboard players with fingerings and touch, and players of wind instruments with tonguing.

 

In various genres and periods, the use of articulations, such as slurs, paired tongue-strokes and double tongue-strokes, can have different functions. In virtuosic instrumental music we might chose to add slurs to reach a certain speed, whilst in vocal music we might use paired tonguing to match the text of a vocal part. In sixteenth century diminutions we might try to avoid slurs because most treatises advise us not to for the sake of imitating the human voice, whilst in classical music we might feel the need to add slurs in fast passages, as without them, it would sound ‘old-fashioned’, as Etienne Ozi points out in his celebrated method for the bassoon.[3]

 

Within the family of woodwind instruments we can distinguish important technical differences between those instruments with double reeds, such as the bassoon and the oboe, and those without, such as the cornetto, the recorder and the traverso. Starting a note on a non-reed instrument, one starts the note by touching the palete with the tip of the tongue. When released, the tone speaks. On reed instruments we do not touch the palete, but instead we touch the tip of the reed.

 

Before we proceed, we should define the different ways of articulation.                             

This research is about fast passages and therefore about paired-tonguing, double-tonguing and slurring.  Single-tonguing is used for slow and moderate tempi and, as a result of this, will be touched upon only briefly in this paper .

  • Paired-tonguing is a combination of strong and weak ‘single’ syllables and is mainly used for passages in tempi between moderate and fast. E.g. tu du, tu du, tu du
  • Double-tonguing is a tongue-stroke used by wind players to articulate fast passages cleanly, clearly and without slurs. It is used when the tempo is too fast to use  single tonguing. Later on we will focus on double-tonguing more extensively.
  • The term slurring is applied when we play legato without the use of the tongue.

 

The term single-tongue stroke is used when we use the same syllable consecutively. E.g. tu, tu,



[1] White, Bryan. "articulation." The Oxford Companion to Music. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press, accessed September 24, 2014, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/opr/t114/e420.

[2] Music-Dictionary.org, accessed August 24, 2015, http://www.music-dictionary.org/articulation

[3] Ozi, Etienne. Méthode nouveau de basson (Paris,1803), pg.9 “Il ne faut jamais piquer toutes les notes de l’example ci-après, dans quelques mouvements qu’il soit; cela tiendroit trop du vieux style musical”.