Group 4
One of the most valued skills in music is having the ability to sightread with ease. That is because it aids in so many things: learning music quickly, being able to play with friends/colleagues on minimal practice time, and most importantly, being able to evaluate a new piece and its possibilities!
Join Leann as she leads a new Two Week Intensive designed to improve your sightreading through focused advice, tips, exercises, and more! Letās start playing NEW music!
- Course Period: October 17th - 28th
- Class Size: max. 4 Groups Ć” 10 Participants
- Optional check-In via Zoom: October 24th at 3pm Pacific time!
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/89265945226?pwd=NS9iTEd0aFJ2ME03TUs1Y2tTaExYZz09
Assignment 1
Assignment 2
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Hello everyone! My sight-reading ability definitely needs improving. I struggle to read ahead when i'm playing and find it difficult to pick out patterns quickly enough. When I do try to practice sight-reading my head hurts, and my brain goes into a lockdown! But i'm pretty stoical and like to keep soldiering on. I've decided to choose one of the easy Burgmuller etudes for this exercise. Thank you, Leann for your instruction, i'm excited to jump in.
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Looking forward to this! I started working on my sight reading this summer because the gulf between the current repertoire I'm learning and my ability to sight read is so large it's ridiculous. It's difficult for me to look ahead, even a couple notes. I've managed to get by this far because I can memorize fairly quickly, so I don't actually read much. I'm interested in composition. I'd like to be able to read through repertoire that I never plan to play more than once or twice as a way to browse for ideas or learn common practices of a particular time period.
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Hi Leann and Group 4,
I'm excited to participate in this Intensive. I have been fortunate to have had sight-reading as a strength in my childhood. My teacher entered me into some festival competition sight-reading classes, and it was frightening but not terrible.
Now, as a returning pianist, my sight-reading is still good, but I could use tips to overcome my struggles which include encountering:
- Large span chords, having small hands - deciding quickly whether I should roll it or drop notes & which to drop
- Tempos of Allegro & faster
- Ornaments - trills, ambiguous markings, imagining what they are supposed to sound like, by composer -- like it's Bach so "tr" should be ____, or it's Mozart so "tr" should be ____ ...
- Comping lines, for example:
- Chords with several accidentals
- Odd time signatures
- Key signatures with more than 4 sharps or flats
- More than 3 leger lines to count down below or up above the staff
- Transposing - when a vocalist says the score is not in her/his/their key...
- Keeping up and developing sight-reading skill as an approaching senior citizen with degrading eyesight and reactiveness
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o.k, this exercise has been very revealing for me. Much harder than at first it seemed. My first attempt was on Burgmullers "La petite Reunion". I knew the tempo would be too fast for me, so slowed that down to a crawl. I thought some of the thirds fingering might be tricky too so planned to just play the top line. It looks so easy, but I really struggled to make any sense of it. Lots of hesitations. So i've tried another, "Innocence", and simplified it even more. Yes, it was a bit better, fewer hesitations and I could feel the rhythm better, but in all honesty it still was not my finest hour. I've discovered that what I think looks easy enough, is in fact still too much for me at my current level. I'm guessing that this is one of the reasons it takes me soooo long to learn a piece of music. I know all of the notes, but I just can't think quickly enough in the moment, which means I never have the time to look ahead and prepare for the next phrase. I'll keep practicing, but will probably have to find some even easier pieces, or perhaps stick to just a couple of bars. Although i'm a bit deflated, I think this is a HUGE learning moment for me - to find out what exactly is realistic. I think this will help me set better, more achievable goals overall with my practice. I'm looking forward to hearing how everyone else is getting on.
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Thank you to Jenny for suggesting Burgmuller. I picked "Le Courant Limpide" because my sight reading skills are low, but it also looked like a pretty piece and I liked the title. I liked Leann's first recommendation of figuring out what your goal is, which for me is to browse for compositional ideas. Before I played the piece, I didn't think about the fact that oscillating between G and D in the left hand would set up a nice rocking feeling which makes sense given the title. I did look through the shape of the line for the right hand before I played it. I was trying to have an idea of where I was going--like when you're driving and you mostly look right in front of you but you are aware that there is a stop sign at the end of the block.
I think what I would do differently next time would be to only play the quarters notes in the right hand on the first pass because the shape of the phrases are interesting. There is a rise and fall in each phrase, but they also cross the barline, which gives it a more fluid sound. Since I was focused somewhat on individual notes, I only brought out those right hand quarters in a couple spots.
Setting my goal beforehand may be feel better about my read through, which wasn't great, but I did get something out of it. I'll attach a photo of the score and my video.
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This was so great! I like how you made up a specific scenario. Watching you cut things was very freeing for me. Part of the reason I'm working on my sight reading is I'd like to start playing duets. I'm actually meeting a potential partner later this week. I tend to be a perfectionist, but the point of this is to just have fun. I think I'll try out your tips on a piece from FaurƩ's Dolly Suite for my video this week. I'll think about how I would simplify it enough for the first read through of the piece if we were looking through potential repertoire at my house. Thanks so much!
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My scenario is sight reading through pieces with a friend of mine who lives out of town, is an experienced pianist and vocalist, but is very rusty and a little shy about her playing. In this scenario, we are trying to decide on a piece we would both like to spend the next 4-6 weeks practicing in order to play together the next time we see each other.
I played the first two sections of "The Garden of Dolly" by FaurƩ (Op. 56, No. 3). I'm not experienced at sight reading, but I do learn relatively quickly. I wanted to pick something that was difficult enough I would enjoy spending a few weeks learning it. I left the primo part for my friend because it's easier throughout this opus, and she could sight read the right hand only and be fine.
There are four sharps in the key signature, lots of accidentals, and I'm not as quick at reading bass clef as I am at treble clef. My goal was to play the bass line at a slow but steady tempo, and work in a little bit of the right hand to get a sense of the rhythmic and harmonic structure, but overall make it easy for my partner to concentrate on playing as much of the melody as possible.