How to improve your Sightreading (and why it is important)
Today we will talk about ways that you can start improving your sightreading, and WHY it is important!
Take a look at these Sightreading exercises
Sight Reading Exercises, Op.45 (Arnoldo Sartorio)
Follow this event link to tune in!
https://app.tonebase.co/piano/live/player/pno-improve-your-sightreading
We are going to be using this thread to gather suggestions and questions!
- What questions do you have on this topic?
- Any particular area you would like me to focus on?
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Sight reading is my nemesis! I would love guidance to help me:
- Recognise patterns quickly;
- Remember notes at a glance so that I can read ahead;
- Know where my hands/fingers are without having to look at them;
- Increase my speed of sight reading;
- Avoid looking at my hands as much as possible.
I'm focusing on sight reading at the moment, because it is the main thing that holds back my progress.
Also, are there any books that would help when practicing sight reading, perhaps with easy pieces rather than the traditional sight reading excerpts?
Really looking forward to this live stream, thank you!
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I could use some tips on how to make bass clef sight-reading as easy as my treble clef reading. I come from a violin background and am "treble-clef dominant". A ToneBase member recommended the iOS app Tenuto, which has drills for note recognition, but it would be nice to have tips for at-the-keyboard sight-reading.
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I'm interested in your thoughts on the use of iPads for electronic scores as it relates to sight-reading. I had two iPads briefly and found the use of forScore's Cue software to link them like a regular book more satisfying to my brain, but this may be influenced by my age and the use of regular paper scores for many years. Thanks for the topic.
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Hi Dominic Cheli ! Thanks for this video! I started to learn to play the piano recently, from scratch, with the guidance of a very good piano teacher, and she also tells me to sight read about 10 min a day. The thing that I find difficult to follow from your advice is that not stopping ever because I still take a long time identifying bass and treble cleff notes at the same time, so I pause a lot. I get that you say that if we make mistakes is not as bad as losing rithm... however... if you get A LOT of wrong notes would you still prioritise keeping time, or maybe get more comfortable first with faster identification of notes and then try to keep the rithm? Thank you very much!