As their name suggests, stringed instruments use vibrated strings to produce sound – but how are these instruments played and what are the different types?

By Charlotte Smith

Published: Thursday, 24 August 2023 at 10:00 AM


What are stringed instruments?

Stringed instruments are a family of instruments that produce sound from vibrated strings. These can be plucked with the fingers or a plectrum, like the acoustic guitar; made to sound by drawing a bow across the strings, like a violin or cello; or hit with a light wooden hammer, as inside a modern-day piano.

Strings are one of the five main families of instruments, the others being percussion, woodwind, brass and keyboard.

What are the types of stringed instruments?

Bowed stringed instruments

Modern bowed stringed instruments – violin, viola, cello and double bass – make up the string section of the western symphony orchestra. Early versions of these instruments such as the viol or viola da gamba first appeared in Spain in the mid-to-late 15th century, and were most popular in the Renaissance and Baroque periods. The modern violin first appeared in the early 16th century. The viola, cello and double bass are larger cousins of the violin, which produce deeper sounds.

The body of modern bowed stringed instruments generally comprise a hollow, wooden box (or soundbox), fingerboard and four strings made or steel, nylon or gut. The bow is a wooden stick strung with horse or synthetic hair. Rosin, a sticky substance similar to sap, is used by string players to add friction to the bow hair so that it grips the strings and allows them to ‘speak’. The player rubs the hardened cake of rosin onto the bow hair to achieve an even coat. As it’s applied, the cake becomes a white powder which bonds to the bow hair.

The player holds the bow with their right hand and with their left hand holds the instrument’s fingerboard, using the fingers as stops on the strings to create notes of different pitches. The violin and viola are held under the player’s chin, while the cello and double bass are head upright against the payer’s body – a metal spike, attached to the bottom of the instrument, anchors it to the floor.