4.3 Speed of Attack


The third element is attack speed. It is easy to conflate this with break speed, how flat or broken your chords are, but they are separate. A flat or placqué chord can be produced by moving fingers slowly past the strings, or conversely, a long arpeggiated chord with fast fingers. A trick for controlling attack speed is to change the resistance through imagery, for example, imagining the pull of fingers through honey, oil, or water. Speed of attack is shown with the wave representing the vibration  of the string, a greater wave indicating a faster speed and a straight line representing slow speed.



Figure 4.31—Notation of fast attack speed


A faster attack speed is brighter, the sound is more immediate with more attack, but has less body to it.

Figure 4.32— Notation of slow attack speed


A slower speed creates a sweeter, richer sound with more of a bloom in resonance and less attack.

Figure 4.33— Notation for medium attack speed


Medium speed has the present sound and warmth of the slow speed but more attack and articulation from the fast speed.