well i finally got this book and it looks like it will help out a lot. I just have a couple of questions for anyone who is already familiar with it. The first drills that they have in the book for sightreading, should i play with both hands or do them seperatly? It seems like for those drills he is not worried about getting you to sight read just getting you used to the notes. Also should i not look at the piano for these drills and feel for each note, or should i not worry about that in these intro drills at look at the notes?
Also, not that i'm going to need them for a while, for the bach pieces he says to get can i download them anywhere. He mentioned they should be without vocals.
The drills at the center of the book are there to be found easily
There's not a single way to use them, they're used as the basis for many different exercises
Go at page 30
All the KO (Keyboard Orientation) and VP (Visual Perception) drill are listed
They must be done at the same time so if you do KO1 you must also do VP1, if you do KO7 you must also do VP7
The KO exercises teach you to move your hands among the keyboard with control, orientation sense and coordination.
They mostly ask you to play chords, thirds, octave displacements, only black keys and scales without looking
You need a book of scales for these one
The VP exercises teach you how to sightread from the sheet through intervals recognition
The 1° VP exercise wants you to be able to sightread without mistakes the exercises at the center of the book (SD1 from SD4) at the speed on 1 note per second (put your metronome at 60 and say one note per beat)
This alone will keep your busy for quite some time (a week or less) and you shouldn't attempt other exercises and go on with VP2, VP3, VP4 and so on until you master the one you're practicing
Till VP5 you will always need the exercises at the center of the book (you will just do different things with the same exercises)
From VP5 to VP9a you will need a book of Bach Chorales for piano (hence four parts in two lines [treble and cleff] rather than four lines [Soprano, Alto, Tenor, Bass])
You can find the Bach Chorals for Piano here
Kalmus Bach 371 Four-Part Chorales for Organ or Piano - Volume 1Kalmus Bach 371 Four-Part Chorales for Organ or Piano - Volume 2Schirmer 371 Harmonized Chorales with Figured Bass Piano SoloChoose the one you prefer
The first ones are two volumes (so 198 chorales per volume) and have bigger notes
The second one is 371 chorales in one single volume, and thus notes are smaller