On some instruments (e.g.,
piano,
harp,
xylophone), discrete tones are clearly audible when sliding. For example, on a
keyboard, a player's fingernails can be made to slide across the white keys or over the black keys, producing either a
C major scale or an
F major pentatonic scale, or their
relative modes; by performing both at once, it is possible to produce a full
chromatic scale.
Maurice Ravel used glissandi in many of his piano compositions, and "
Alborada del Gracioso" contains notable piano glissando passages in thirds executed by the right hand.
Rachmaninoff,
Prokofiev,
Liszt and
Gershwin have all used glissandi for piano in notable compositions.
Organ players—particularly in contemporary music—sometimes employ an effect known as the palm glissando, where over the course of the glissando the flat of the hand is used to depress a wide area of keys simultaneously, resulting in a dramatic
atonal sweep. A similar device on the piano is cluster-glissandos, used extensively by
Karlheinz Stockhausen in
Klavierstück X, and which "more than anything else, lend the work its unique aural flavour". On a harp, the player can slide their finger across the strings, quickly playing the scale (or on pedal harp even
arpeggios such as C–D–E–F–G–A–B).
Wind,
brass, and fretted-stringed-instrument players can perform an extremely rapid chromatic scale (e.g., sliding up or down a string quickly on a fretted instrument). Arpeggio effects (likewise named glissando) are also obtained by bowed strings (playing
harmonics) and brass, especially the
horn. ==Continuous glissando ==