Scales are the most over-prescribed and under-explained part of string practice. Most players run scales as a warmup, in the same keys, at the same tempo, and wonder why their intonation in real repertoire never improves. Scales work, but only if you practice them as a diagnostic and corrective tool, not as a ritual. Here is the routine that transformed my own intonation in my mid-twenties.
Practice the Key You Are Actually Playing
If you are working on Bruch g minor, your scale of the day is g minor and its closest neighbors. If you are working on Brahms violin concerto, your scale of the day is D major and its dominant. Random keys are random. Repertoire-specific keys train your hand for the actual music in front of you.
Use a Drone, Always
Put a drone on the tonic of your scale. Play the scale slowly, two notes per bow, listening for ringing tones on every diatonic degree. If a note does not ring against the drone, it is not in tune. Adjust until it sings. This trains your ear to expect the resonance you should be hearing in real repertoire.
Three-Octave Scales With Shift Awareness
Practice three-octave scales but stop on every shift. Hold the destination note, listen, and adjust. Most intonation failures in repertoire are shift failures, and the only way to fix them is to make the shift itself the focus, not an afterthought between notes.
Double Stops as a Diagnostic Tool
Add thirds and sixths in the relevant key. Double stops expose intonation flaws faster than anything else. If your thirds in g minor are sour, your single-line g minor passages have the same flaws — you just cannot hear them as clearly.
Apply Immediately
After ten minutes of scale work in the relevant key, go straight to the repertoire passage that gave you trouble yesterday. The connection should be obvious. If it is not, your scale work is too disconnected from the music. Adjust the scale exercise until the transfer is direct.
The Twenty-Day Test
Commit to this targeted scale routine for twenty consecutive days on one piece. At the end of three weeks, record yourself and compare to a recording from day one. The improvement is almost always dramatic. Scales work — but only when you make them work for the music.
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Get the Free GuideEthan Kim is the founder of Orchestra Kingdom, helping string players win auditions and move up in their sections. Follow him on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube for daily tips.