I've recently been experiencing a rapid growth in my reading ability and I'm just having so much fun with it. I was hoping this thread could serve two purposes: How good are you at sight reading, and how do you think it affects your playing overall?
Of course, you can elaborate further than the poll options but I'd just like to see how many people fall into each category.
Between most things immediately but without the having to 'slow down' much, yet not anywhere near the Liszts and Saint-Saens of the world. Both would read straight from full score, transposing instruments 'n' all, playing a more than creditable reduction at the piano - and at tempo.
I was an accompanist for decades, the 'knack' of course allowing that as a profession: sight-reading is very much part and parcel of the terrain, including knowing what to leave out of some of the more non-pianistic orchestral reductions while leaving the musically critical and 'what makes sense.'
Typically, I take forever to memorize. Those who don't read quickly tend to train the memory: those who do too often don't.
Because of a complete lack of the skill the thread actually inquires about, I am reduced to answering the thread title literally: Sight reading is all I know to do, not having Braille.
I'm not horrible, since I don't have difficutly to read the music in itself (as long as itn't heavy virtuoso writing, but since I'm mostly a beginner, I don't sight-read hard pieces), but I have hard times feeling "at home with the keyboard". So I tend to make stupid mistake when there are shifts and so on. And I cannot really sight read counterpoint (of course..) (by counterpoint I mean at least Bach two part inventions and such).
I think it's because I lack experience. So I try to sight-read everyday and I'm patient.
I'm rather bad at sight reading. I manage to quickly read the notes, but not quick enough to actually play the piano whilst doing so.
Which makes me wonder: just how do you lot practice your sight reading? Is it taking a simple or advanced piece and using your hand at a certain tempo to force yourself to read on said certain tempo?
I've gotten a lot better at sight reading in the last year, thanks to accompanying last fall and also to sight reading lots of 4-hands stuff with a couple friends of mine who are much better pianists than me. Sight reading with other people is a lot of fun and makes you improve quickly. I sight read for fun on my own now, especially lieder (while singing along) and Beethoven sonatas at less than their proper tempo.
I got better at sight reading (and got to the point where I could be a decent accompanist) when I started forcing myself to keep going and stay in my chosen tempo no matter what. If I make a mistake, there's no stopping and playing the passage over - it's not like other kinds of practicing. That's why sight reading with others helped me so much. It made me stick to these rules.
What PetrB says about people being good at either sightreading or memorization definitely holds true in my experience. I memorize pretty slowly. I know several people who do not sight read as well as I do but memorize much faster.
My sightreading improved when a former teacher made me start playing no faster than I could make no more than two mistakes per page (there's something wrong with that sentence but whatever). I also started setting a period of practice aside (sometimes) to sightread.
Well tbh I'm about as good at sight-reading as I am at playing nowadays. I stopped studying my instrument (piano) properly some time ago. This by no means implies that I don't play the piano - I use it in composing, and spend a lot of time improvising - but I just don't have the patience to sit and practice a piece. Yeah yeah, I know it's a good thing to do, perhaps I will acquire it. Still I was pleasantly surprised to find that after some time of reading very little music I could quite competently sight-read some of the 48, from there I moved to Haydn sonatas and loved playing these. For me it is the melodic parts that I find more difficult to play, but hopefully this will change as I get a better grasp of melody in general.
I unfortunately have a physical disease which make it very difficult to play the piano (I do understand the music, but my fingermotorics are not fine enough). Which means I always missed the right notes. Sometimes I'm very disappointed that I'll never be able to play better.
My musical understanding, sight reading, is very good. I read along Masses, Opera's, Organ and Piano pieces, Symphonies and I agree that it is very nice to be able to understand the music at that level...
I chose the next to best option, but I'm probably somewhere between that one and the middle one. It also makes a big difference wether it's something I've heard before or not, but then maybe it's not strictly speaking sight reading anymore..
for me the difficulty is in sight-reading chords and contrapuntal lines. I can sight-read things on horn and guitar pretty well, but most piano music is very difficult for me sight-reading.
For me what worked was simply taking stuff out from the library and trying to play them without caring about the result...
Now if you are a perfectionist maybe repeat a difficult part or two even though that is not exactly sight-reading....
You can also try to follow music scores from some videos on youtube, I actually quite enjoy doing that.
I am only excellent on piano and oboe (this is why collaborative work is one of my favourite things to do). I can sightread classical guitar painfully slowly, but I can play nothing else.
I put "decent", but I'm worse at sight reading than I should be for my playing ability. I would enjoy playing a lot more if I was better at sight-reading, but I don't enjoy playing enough to put the time and effort in.
Sight reading training was a part of my later keyboard lessons. It was in preparation for auditioning for church organist positions, where during the playing part of the interview, most always an unfamiliar anthem or hymn is placed on the music desk and the organist candidate is required to play it at sight ... and in tempo.
I've never regretted that training and can still, to this day, sight read organ and anthem scores. My choir director at church appreciates that ability of mine.
Once learned, it still has to be practiced to remain effective.
I'm not that great a violinist.. but my actual playing is far beyond any ability to sight read that I might have. I can pick simple things up by ear pretty quickly, but sight reading only works when I've already got most of it by ear and just need something to fill in the blanks with.
I'm very good at sight reading compared to my piano skills... My parents, both professional pianists, have TONS of sheet music and I like reading them for fun. I think that's how my sight reading became good. This is the fastest way in my opinion. Reading a lot of stuff for fun.
It's a good thing.. However, I realized that it makes me 'lazy' sometimes. I know I have to study harder the difficult technical parts... I just go through passages quite easily and I feel less need to study because I can read it.
Now that I'm getting serious at playing the piano, I'll have to study more
This summer, I sat down and figured: "hell, I've played a series of Prelude and Fugues, and a Toccata, surely I can sightread two-voiced inventions by Bach?". Nope. Polyphony is hard.
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