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#1148254 - 12/02/05 12:04 AM
Re: I'm a composer and I can't read music. Is that weird?
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9000 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/01/05
Posts: 9863
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Do you think I should focus more on learning how to read instead of composing? What're your thoughts? Replace "instead" with "in addition to." Reading music is actually very easy, once you learn all of the symbols (it's not so difficult that you will have to stop composing in order to learn musical notation). Writing music can be time-consuming, but if you can play it on the piano, then you can just look at the keys that you are playing and then write them down on a staff. I suppose you don't really need to be able to read/write in order to compose music in your head, but it certainly helps!
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Sam
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#1148257 - 12/15/05 10:29 AM
Re: I'm a composer and I can't read music. Is that weird?
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Full Member
Registered: 08/14/05
Posts: 93
Loc: Sweden
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I'm composing quite a bit, but I have never written down anything. I know how to read music, but I never felt the need for writing anything down. I just play, (hope I) remember, and have fun!
I wish I was able to write down what I hear in my head... (Ok not write it down IN my head, that is)
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#1148258 - 12/15/05 10:37 AM
Re: I'm a composer and I can't read music. Is that weird?
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 2050
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I think it would be in your best interests to try to learn to read/write music. Knowing how to do this will make you a much more well-rounded musician, and it will give you the tools you need if you want to have other people play your compositions. If you write a piece for, say violin and piano, no violinist is going to learn the piece by you explaining it or humming it or picking it out on the piano - they're going to want sheet music. Being able to write it down will give you so much more flexibility.
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What you are is an accident of birth. What I am, I am through my own efforts. There have been a thousand princes and there will be a thousand more. There is one Beethoven.
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#1148259 - 12/15/05 11:31 AM
Re: I'm a composer and I can't read music. Is that weird?
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 02/18/05
Posts: 2383
Loc: Urbandale, Iowa
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Originally posted by 8ude:  I think it would be in your best interests to try to learn to read/write music. Knowing how to do this will make you a much more well-rounded musician, and it will give you the tools you need if you want to have other people play your compositions. If you write a piece for, say violin and piano, no violinist is going to learn the piece by you explaining it or humming it or picking it out on the piano - they're going to want sheet music. Being able to write it down will give you so much more flexibility. [/b] I would add that even pop musicians write things down. It may be just a melody with chord progressions (i.e. a lead sheet), but it's a way of commiting ideas to paper for posterity (or further review). When this thread first showed up I was tempted to answer simply, Yes, but thought better of it. I've changed my mind about that so in answer to the initial inquiry; Yes
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#1148261 - 12/15/05 01:19 PM
Re: I'm a composer and I can't read music. Is that weird?
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Junior Member
Registered: 12/08/05
Posts: 15
Loc: NC
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Just to chime in -- I don't really "read" music either but have been composing (as a hobby) for over 20 years. I can *decipher* musical notation, but I simply haven't used the written page for my own compositions (and never could sight read well enough to do anything, even a simple melody line). I guess that happens when you're not classically trained (eek! a barbarian!)...
However, I'm seriously considering taking another approach and working more with notation, especially if I can use software such as Finale/Garritan Personal Orchestra to help me with the transition from a synthesizer-sequencer approach. Call me a cynic, but should I really trust the permanence of magnetic media for all my creative work ;-)?
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Cheers, ncsteff
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