Of course, sight-reading skill is also tied into your technical skill. If you're sight-reading a very advanced piece and it doesn't sound good, it may not be because you're not a good sight-reader, but rather because you don't yet have the tools needed to execute the piece. This equates, I think, to not understanding the material when you're reading regularly. For instance, I can read a legal dissertation with no problem, but can I understand it? Not if my life depended on it.Peace,Bri
Likewise a good sight-reader is someone who can pick up a piece of music and play it from the score straightaway at tempo without hesitations and with a nice flow. If s/he is a really good sight reader, s/he will be able to phrase and alter the dynamics/agogics of what s/he is sight-reading so as to express the emotions conveyed in the piece.
theoretically it's true... but it takes years of relentless training and practicing in order to achieve,
I only realised sight reading is a skill which has to be specifically taught and learnt when I was asked to be the guinea pig / demonstration student for some visiting academic who specialises in methods for teaching sight reading, and she was giving some workshop for piano teachers. Now that was stress! Try spending all day sight reading in front of a room of teachers, who then discuss it.
theoretically it's true... but it takes years of relentless training and practicing in order to achieve, and it also depends on what kind of music we're talking about, i mean someone can pick up an easy piece of music and play it from scratch right away and the whole nine yards, but he probably cant play Chopin's Prelude Op. 28 #16 the same fashion. Anyway, there are books where you can get to practice that, try getting some Sight Reading (they should be specifically marked as a sight reading book) book. A good sight reading training book should have enough little music parts for you to play every day, (yes, it's only effective if you practice everyday... even 10 minutes counts) along with the music it should also include rhythm for you to practice daily as well. (whats a good sight reader who can't count rhythm properly?)Here's a good series of sight reading training books that i've been using, try getting a copy of RCM sight/ear training books from your local music store. While you're at it, i agree with pianonut, a good sight reader is to be able to read the music further than you play it. It takes some training, but its doable.
This is very interesting. Could you expand on it?1. Any good tips from this teacher?2. Any metod that is clearly superior to others?3. How exactly did the demonstrations worked? I assume you could already sight-read, so what exaclty were you demonstrating? (that is, how coud the audience tell the difference)Best wishes,Bernhard.
I would not be surprised either if ultimately exquisite sight reading was "playing by ear". That is, you look at the score, you "hear" in your mind what is on the score, and then you "play by ear" what you hear in your mind.
Question for you, now, Bernhard: It's all well and good to start off with a brand new beginner, so you can prevent them from developing bad habits early on, and teach them along the methods you like. What happens if you get a student who is about to do, say a grade 6 ABRSM type level exam, and they have all these nasty habits, such as working out the letter-name of each note, deeply ingrained? You have written before about taking as much time to learn new habits as it did to learn old ones (I remember your high-jump technique analogy somewhere) - but surely it's hard for someone who could have been learning already for 5 or 6 years to now spend that same amount of time developing the new skill to the same level?What do you do with such a student? And the other side of the coin - what would you recommend such a student to do? (Of course, the answer is, spend the time to learn the new skill, but if they have their exam looming, there's only so much that can be done).
What happens if you get a student who is about to do, say a grade 6 ABRSM type level exam, and they have all these nasty habits, such as working out the letter-name of each note, deeply ingrained? You have written before about taking as much time to learn new habits as it did to learn old ones
Not true...I sight read at about a gr. two level (Not Gr. 2 rep, but gr.2 sight reading requirements... ) Over the last 8 months, I have been practicing (a lot) on sight as a skill. I recently did very well on a Gr. 10 sight supplemental exam. So how did I get my sight level from gr 2 to gr 10? I did not sit down and read through everything that I couldI did take a step back and think about what was making me so bad, and try to develop solutions for them. 1) I needed to have a relative tactile keyboard facility. For someone as bad as I was, I had to literally close my eyes, press a "C" and then call out another note...A#...and then play it. I progressed to playing two, three, and four note chords with my eyes closed. 2) My next step was to read through all kinds of scores away from the piano sing them to myself, while tapping as much of the rythm as an accompaniement as possible. Visualize the notes being pushed on an imaginary keyboard. For me, a little black dot on the page was trnasformed into a Key on the piano that I could actually see. 3) My next step was to be sure that my formula patterns were memorized, this is the best way to be comfortable in any key. 4)My next step was to listen to all kinds of music with a score in hand, or on screen5) my next step was to actually play the material, slowly, with a sheet over my hands, (this really strengthens your ear as well) I did not even let myself look at the keys at the beginning, (just run your hands over the black notes) I believe that once you are at step 4, then you are ready to get all of the pointers you normally get when asking for reading advice...Tell someone at step one to "make sure to read ahead when playing" YEAH RIGHT All of my teachers just fed me little pointers..."look at the outlines of the chords" "go slow" "use pedal so you can move your hands quickly" without adressing my root problem...a deficiency in basic prepatory reading skills. I liked everything taht Bernard said too.
I don't think that sight-reading ability is really imortant at all. All that matters is what it sounds like when you sit down to play. You can take, I don't know, Hungarian Rhapsody #2 say, and every-good-boy-does-fine your way through it, and write all the notes out on the page and listen to recordings and, with enough practice, and technical skill, which is all that really matters, be able to play it how it should be done just fine. How you get there doesn't matter, only the end product does. It will take a poor-sight reader longer to learn a piece, but these difficult pieces are going to take a looooong time to master anyway, so what's a few extra hours spent memorizing? Me? I can't sight read to save my life, so I plod through it slowly, memorizing as I go, practicing what I memorized, and after however long it takes, I have it down. Learned some hard stuff this way.Say you're a carpenter building a house. Some guys can look at a wall and just tell where the two-feet intervals are to put the studs in. Studs go up faster. You can't do this. You have to meticulously measure every inch of the house in order to do anything. It'll take you longer, but it the end both houses stand just fine.
I've been reading this thread and the related ones. I have a question.I'm currently trying to focus a little more on sightreading (grade 4ish performance level) and have started with a classical book a couple of levels below. I'm wondering if I am approaching it properly. I look at the music, analyse it (at a basic level), identify the repeated measures, tap the rhythm for both hands........then attempt to sightread without looking and without stopping.....well I really suck at this....... Is it necessary to sightread both hands at the same time? Is it ok to start hands separately? That seems to go better......or should I plod through my mistakes with both hands and be assured that perserverance will pay off?? sigh sigh.....
1) I needed to have a relative tactile keyboard facility. For someone as bad as I was, I had to literally close my eyes, press a "C" and then call out another note...A#...and then play it. I progressed to playing two, three, and four note chords with my eyes closed.
I asked my teacher about tips for sight-reading and she said it was important to be able to "feel intervals" without looking. That is be able to play 4ths, 5ths, 6ths, etc without groping for the key and obviously knowing what keys are a 4th, 5th, 6th away etc. I am a little shaky on how to go about practicing this. I think it will probably start to come naturally but I'd like to work at proactively. Any hints guys?Also, JeremyChilds said: Can you expound on this at all? Maybe explaining your method a little better. I already practice chords in all inversions and I can pretty much play them without looking. Did yoy practice this skill HS or HT? What specific chords did you drill and in what order? I can play an augmented chord easily right after playing a major (just raise the 5th) but I don't know if I could hit an augmented chord straight away w/o feeling for the major first...~omnisis
Can you expound on this at all? Maybe explaining your method a little better. I already practice chords in all inversions and I can pretty much play them without looking. Did yoy practice this skill HS or HT? What specific chords did you drill and in what order? I can play an augmented chord easily right after playing a major (just raise the 5th) but I don't know if I could hit an augmented chord straight away w/o feeling for the major first...~omnisis
Its also a disadvantage if you become really good and just love sight-reading and dislike polishing pieces. Come to think of it, I'd rather be a good memorizer than sight-reader.