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#943720 - 03/13/05 02:52 PM
Re: Sight Reading Books
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Full Member
Registered: 09/27/04
Posts: 89
Loc: New York City
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you should start out by reading both left and right hand together at a very slow pace trying not hit any wrong notes until you can increase the level at which you are reading. Read through the piece only once and then go on to another, trying not to make any mistakes.
_________________________
To play the piano is to live again!
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#943721 - 03/17/05 01:17 PM
Re: Sight Reading Books
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Junior Member
Registered: 02/20/04
Posts: 12
Loc: England
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I have "Super Sight-Reading Secrets". I found it really, really helpful because it taught my fingers to move confidently around the keyboard without me looking at them.
Before getting the book I had been trying to learn to sight read by spending a short time each day reading through simple graded sight reading exercises. This approach simply didn't work for me - it was like banging my head against a brick wall! Very frustrating.
Looking back I'm not surprised I had difficulties - I was trying to watch both my fingers and the music and it's hard looking in two places at once! "Super Sight-Reading Secrets" resolved that problem.
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#943723 - 03/29/05 05:52 PM
Re: Sight Reading Books
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Full Member
Registered: 03/24/04
Posts: 166
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I've got both books.
My then 9 year-old practiced the exercises in "Super Sight-Reading Secrets" for two weeks and went on to "Bach Chorales" as suggested. He could read pretty much anything in "the Library of Piano Classics" soon.
For me, it's a different story. I was dead when I encountered "Bach Chorales". I refocused my effort on Smith's book --- it's fairly strict five-finger position exercises and limited mostly to one note for each hand. I've been trying to pick my son's brain for tricks and short-cuts without much success so far.
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#943725 - 04/05/05 11:11 AM
Re: Sight Reading Books
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Junior Member
Registered: 02/20/04
Posts: 12
Loc: England
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I started noticing the benefits as soon as my hands had learnt to find the black notes and then find the white ones relative to them, and as soon as I had learnt to relate the notes on the stave to the notes I was feeling. This would have been after the third set of "Drills".
Unfortunately though I can't remember how long it took me to get that far as it was a while ago, but I think it took several weeks. A slow process, but absolutely worth it!
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#943726 - 04/15/05 12:12 AM
Re: Sight Reading Books
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Junior Member
Registered: 12/13/04
Posts: 12
Loc: H e r e
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Hi smidgeon
I also bought this book but have not read and touch on it yet.
Well, may I know at what grade are u as I am a fresh beginner learning for only 4 months.
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#943727 - 04/26/05 10:05 AM
Re: Sight Reading Books
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1000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/11/04
Posts: 1312
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For sight reading I use the Faber "Accelerated Course For The Older Beginner" Book 1 and Book 2
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