Sightreading
Sightreading
09:12 on Wednesday, August 29, 2007
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Re: Sightreading
11:10 on Wednesday, August 29, 2007
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Re: Sightreading
12:28 on Wednesday, August 29, 2007
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Bilbo (1340 points)
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A suggestion for the teacher, That in order to teach good sight reading, you need to do it individually with them playing alone, otherwise when they play together they are going to follow each other probably with little development in the reading of rhythm.
Some of the most difficult sight reading is in these marching band pieces that are arrangements of pop tunes. I would consider having them read the rhythms out loud. Pick a few tough pieces and have them discuss the important points to go over(if they have time).
Patrick's suggestions are good. Since there is very little on a music page that isn't important to a good performance, you need to scan the page for everything that you can find, from the name of the piece, through the tempo/style indication, Key sig. through the repeat sequences. As mentioned, look for difficult passages and try them out if you have time. Even if the piece has rests, use the time wisel to prepare.
Don't zero in 100% on the fast fingerings, rhythms are often where the mistakes happen and the counting errors will more often be on the larger note values and not the running notes.
For the actual reading, keep going, don't dwell on mistakes.
Fundimentals, such as scales and general music notation reading skills are important. Understanding the foreign language words (Meno Mosso, Andantino) as well as tempo indicators such as MM markings and time signatures are important.
Experience in reading is equally important.
There are a few books like:
150 ORIGINAL EXERCISES IN UNISON FOR BAND OR ORCHESTRA by GROVER C. YAUS, ROY M. MILLER
which throw melodic phrases at the reader where they don't follow predictable patterns but basically, there are very few books for private lessons which challenge our rhythmic reading very well. Most of the Etudes and Studies don't have rhythmic variety .
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Re: Sightreading
12:35 on Wednesday, August 29, 2007
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Re: Sightreading
13:08 on Wednesday, August 29, 2007
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piccolo1991 (94 points)
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Well, I agree with all of those things...I usually do that in lessons. In GA there is a guy who has compiled an all state sightreading book...It is great. 3-4 line pieces that are organized by level, key signature, and time signature.
I will try to do some individual sight reading with them...but I only have 5 days (45-60 minutes with each class) to teach them F, Bb, Eb, Ab, Db, Gb, B, and E scales two octaves...chromatic C to C...an etude...and sightreading. AND I know a lot of the kids DO NOT know correct high fingerings (I did a Symphonic camp and got to work with them for 2 hours last year). So, I really don't know if I can justify working with each kid on sight reading and letting the others just sit. What do you think about taking in quartets and working sightreading with 4 people at a time??? That was the only thing I could think of to conserve time AND get people only 1 per part. I have printed off some articles that I found online and out of Flute Talk about good sightreading advice that I could have half of them read while I work with the others.
Just an idea...I am very open to suggestions since I am really batteling how to best approach this!!!
Thanks!
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Re: Sightreading
13:09 on Wednesday, August 29, 2007
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