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#1834593 - 01/29/12 11:00 PM
sight reading
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Junior Member
Registered: 01/28/12
Posts: 6
Loc: Westchester, NY
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Can anyone recommend a good sight reading series for adults. I've been playing piano for 40 plus years - but mostly by ear with chords (I'm a great fake book player) but never developed strong sight reading skills. I would like to build this skill from the ground up. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Best,
Brian
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___________________ Steinway L (1929) Yamaha CP5
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#1835506 - 01/31/12 03:20 AM
Re: sight reading
[Re: robbinson]
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Full Member
Registered: 10/04/11
Posts: 344
Loc: Hong Kong
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Can you sing the so fa name from a music staff? Can you find out the key of the song from the key signature? May be you know all of above, just want to improve the speed?
For sight reading have various meaning.
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Yamaha YPP-50 Ritmuller UP121RB Promote Harmony -- Tune Up Your Piano Always ready to give but not insist my own value http://weiyanwo.wordpress.com
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#1835646 - 01/31/12 10:25 AM
Re: sight reading
[Re: Weiyan]
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Junior Member
Registered: 01/28/12
Posts: 6
Loc: Westchester, NY
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Thanks - yes, I can read notes and musical notation - I chance "translate" that to the keyboard very, very slowly. Regards, Brian
_________________________
___________________ Steinway L (1929) Yamaha CP5
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#1835657 - 01/31/12 10:59 AM
Re: sight reading
[Re: robbinson]
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 06/16/11
Posts: 968
Loc: Maine
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I would suggest, in addition to specific sight-reading books, getting a method series and working through it. I like Piano Adventures. They have lots of supplementary books for practice too at any given level.
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Baldwin Hamilton 45" upright... not fancy, but well loved AMB Menuets BWV 116, 118, 120 Haslinger, Sonatina in C Burgmüller, Harmony of the Angels McKay, Cowboy Song
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#1835664 - 01/31/12 11:11 AM
Re: sight reading
[Re: robbinson]
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Full Member
Registered: 02/09/07
Posts: 254
Loc: Port Angeles, WA
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I usually suggest to my adult students that sight reading study can be done with music that you enjoy (maybe you enjoy the standards, since you are a great fake book player) but choose music a couple levels below where you actually play. Then, vary the repertoire occasionally - classical, ragtime with fast left hand changes, or for a real challenge, hymns in four part harmony!
You might start out with some "easy piano" books of popular music or a books with graded collections of classical pieces. If the music is too simple, you can move up -- the important thing is to not choose music that's too challenging to start with, because you don't want to get frustrated! Frustration and tension actually prevent you from learning. So go easy and focus on playing through, not stopping every time you make a little mistake. The point is fluid reading, not perfection!
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Find some help for stage fright and share what helps you -- Stage Fright Tips. Let's learn from each other!
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#1835673 - 01/31/12 11:39 AM
Re: sight reading
[Re: robbinson]
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 03/01/07
Posts: 2415
Loc: Bethesda, MD (Washington D.C)
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the issue with folks who play well from fake books is that their sight reading is usually many levels below their playing levels. Methods like Four Star are good in that sense because the level of difficulty is progressive. It is hard otherwise to find sheet "at your level". Unless you worked with a teacher.
I would get to a music store, try Four Star level 1, and see how easy it is. If it's trivial, try level 2. Still, if you can sight read it easy, try level 3. If level 3 is too hard, get book 2 and work through it.
Also, my guess is that you don't actually mean to sight read, but rather play music from sheet, working through a piece for a few days and then be able to play it, with the help of the music.
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#1835907 - 01/31/12 06:37 PM
Re: sight reading
[Re: EJR]
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Junior Member
Registered: 01/28/12
Posts: 6
Loc: Westchester, NY
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Thanks all. I really appreciate it. I do love standards :-). I'll try to incorporate all of these suggestions (work through a level/series designed for sight reading, while working with some basic music of the genres I enjoy). I'm looking forward to this challenge (which I avoided in my youth!). I bought a digital piano with headphones so as not to burden my wife and children as I learn (keeping the acoustic piano/grand (my friend)) for playing the fake books for now. Looking forward to to day when I can make the grand sing with some classical works.
Best,
Brian
_________________________
___________________ Steinway L (1929) Yamaha CP5
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