@noldar12 said:
Edward, if you change bow direction at the top of the slide, that is not a true portamento. As a strings (bass) player, I can remember my teacher commenting (more than once) that a slide when shifting positions, prior to a bow direction change was a sign of sloppy technique. One "can" increase bow pressure upon reaching the 2nd note, but that does not seem "normal" to me either. The closest to what you are describing, with the attack on the 2nd note would be a type of portato, though that normally refers to a type of pulse when playing repeated notes (i.e. no shifting) on the same bowstroke.
That's not true for all String instruments. The majority of the time Violinists (not Bass players) use a Russian underslide, it coincides with a bow change. You are correct that with a French overslide (which is the default for changing position) a bow change can disguise the slide, providing that the position change is not between positions miles away from each other.
DG