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Sight-Reading-10 Steps to Improve

Your Piano Sight-Reading

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10 Steps to Improve Your Sight-Reading

by David Wärn & Johan Sandback

The three different types of sight-reading

There might be a number of reasons why you are reading this: perhaps you are

facing a piano exam where you will have to perform a short piece at sight; perhaps

you just want to be able to learn new repertoire more quickly; or perhaps you want

to become a more competent accompanist or ensemble player, which often entails

being handed a thick bunch of music to play through without much preparation.

What we have just outlined by mentioning these possible reasons is the three main

situations where you will be required to sight-read:

1. Playing through a new piece for the first time, which could be done together

with your teacher or at home.

2. Sight-reading a piece as an accompanist or as part of an ensemble, where

you will not have the same opportunity to stop and take time to analyze.

3. Sight-reading as part of an exam, where you will get just a short time to look

through the details of the piece before you make a complete and definite

performance.

The 10 steps to become a better sight-reader that you will read about in a moment

will help you cope with all these situations. It’s no secret that many pianists find the

exam or ensemble situations rather frightening – some may even be slightly

embarrassed that they are so poor sight-readers, when their performance otherwise

is quite good. Follow the advice that you are about to read and the elements of

sight-reading that scare you will gradually disappear.

Look at the first two sight-reading situations again. If you think about it, it is pretty

obvious that working at your sight-reading skills will not only take much of the stress

away from certain taxing situations that we have to face as pianists. It will also make

you a better musician generally. The less time and effort you need to put in just

deciphering the notes, the more you can concentrate on interpretation, technical

issues and so on.

Your technique will improve because you will be able to try out more music, exposing

yourself to more technical problems and gradually beginning to solve some of them

more easily as you for instance get to know the peculiarities of a certain composer.

In the ensemble situation, you will be able to listen and adapt your playing more

easily to your partners when you don’t have to fight as hard to get all the notes in.

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Is it possible to practice sight-reading?

Can you really practice sight-reading? Isn’t that a contradiction in terms? Isn’t it the

whole point of sight-reading that you are not allowed to practice?

One could argue that the best way to become a great sight-reader is to try as hard

as possible to develop one’s understanding of music and to practice technique. If

you are already familiar with the principles of composition - harmony, counterpoint

etc. - as well as the styles of different composers and eras, deciphering notes will

cease to be a problem. If, in addition to that, you are in possession of a great

technique, you will also be able to play a lot of music at sight.

The only trouble is that to gain all that knowledge and skill, you more or less have to

be able to read music in the first place, which of course doesn’t come as easily to

everyone. For most of us, the process of improving one’s musicianship is a complex

one. If we work diligently to improve our technical, musical and theoretical skills we

will become better sight-readers, but it also works the other way around: if we

practice sight-reading, other skills and insights may come more easily to us.

So, the answer should most certainly be: yes, you can and should practice sight-

reading. If you suspect that you are a fairly poor sight-reader, the best thing you

could do is probably to include it in your daily practice. And as our ten steps will

show you, practicing sight-reading is not always the same thing as actually sight-

reading. Just reading a lot of music will probably make you a better sight-reader

eventually, but there are more efficient strategies which will make you reach your

specific sight-reading goals more quickly.

Do I need to use specific sight-reading books, DVDs or software to

practice sight-reading?

If you find that you need to work a lot on the three initial steps, it will probably be a

good idea to get one or two books with sight-reading exercises, as they are often

built up in a way that allows you to stay for a while within the same key or time

signature, practicing the same sort of rhythms, scales, chords or intervals until you

know them, which is exactly what you are going to find useful.

When you get more advanced, however, the best thing is to practice your sight-

reading skills on real music, the kind that you are already working on in your

repertoire studies. If you are playing at an intermediate level and don’t feel that your

sight-reading skills are particularly poor, you can probably do without tailor-made

sight-reading exercises.

How far will these 10 steps take me?

As you surely already understand, just reading about them will not take you

anywhere! Of course you need to show some dedication and overcome some of

the initial frustration we all feel when we are about to try new things. To see any real

improvement, daily work for at least a couple of weeks will certainly be needed.

Another thing which may be useful to remember is what we hinted earlier - your

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sight-reading skills will always develop only within certain limits, set partly by how well

you understand a musical score, and partly by your technique. When you have tried

and tested the 10 steps, and feel that your improvement is slowing down, putting in

more effort on your technical and theoretical skills is what will really take your sight-

reading to the next level.

Three initial steps – acquiring the basic tools

The first three steps are concerned with the “building-blocks” of the page of music

before you. The main things that you have to be able to instantly recognize to be a

good sight-reader are the rhythmic, harmonic and melodic elements of the music. It

will be a good idea to practice these elements separately, gradually introducing

more and more complex variants.

Step 1: Practice time-signatures and rhythms

The very first thing you need to look at before you start sight-reading a music sheet, is

the time signature. We assume that you are already familiar with the concept, and

that you have no difficulty in counting a measure correctly. Still, for sight-reading

purposes, it might be a good idea to practice one time signature at a time, to really

get a feel for what you might come across when you see a 2/4, 3/4, 4/4, 3/8 or 6/8

(and so on) time signature at the top of the page.

For instance, there aren’t that many ways in which you can combine quarter notes

and eighth notes in 3/4 time. If you’ve spent a few hours working them all into your

system, you will begin to feel a lot more comfortable sight-reading music with that

particular rhythmic setup. This is why it makes sense to practice one time signature at

a time. It will give you time to absorb many of the most common rhythmic variants,

making you feel gradually more at home in any time signature.

Step 2: Practice key-signatures

When scanning a page of music before sight-reading it, the next thing your eyes

should stop at is the key signature. You already know that this will tell you which notes

are sharpened or flattened in a given key. You can practice key signatures in much

the same way as time signatures,

You probably did something like this when you were a beginner, starting out in C

major and then adding more and more sharps or flats. This is also one of the reasons

why practicing scales are not such a bad idea. Eventually they will make your fingers

find their way more and more automatically between the black and white keys of a

given scale. As you can imagine, there is no end to the good that this will do your

sight-reading.

In addition to studying the scale, it is also extremely useful to observe the most

common chords and cadences (harmonic progressions) of a certain key. With

practice, this knowledge will help you to predict roughly how a phrase is likely to

continue and conclude. Besides, when sight-reading a technically demanding

piece, being able to spot the most important harmonic elements will often enable

you to give a fairly adequate rendition of the music without having to play all the

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notes. This is particularly useful if you are sight-reading as an accompanist.

Begin with a really simple, short piece and see if you can spot the harmonic

(chordal) elements of the music. There is no need for complete analysis here - if you

are looking at a piece in C major, for example, a good start would be to look for all

C major chords or bass note C:s. This is where the piece returns to its tonal center (the

tonic).

Step 3: Practice intervals

Knowing your way through time and key signatures is all very well, but it won’t help

you much if you are slow at finding the right notes. So how do you speed up your

note-reading? One great tip is to start thinking intervals instead of just note names. I

assure you that no great sight-reader is thinking one small bit about the names of the

notes that he or she is playing, just like nobody is thinking about individual letters

when reading a book. When you read music fluently, you look at shapes and

groupings, instantly fitting all individual notes into rhythmic figures, chords or melodic

figurations.

So how do you start thinking in intervals? I am sure you already do in some respects,

unconsciously if not otherwise. For instance, you will probably be ready to instantly

agree that the distance between two lines on the staff is a third. If you skip a line, you

get a fifth. The same goes for the spaces in between lines. If you get this kind of thing,

you can actually learn to read music excellently without having the slightest clue

about the names of notes.

Try to become more conscious about the distances between notes and what the

various intervals look like on the staff. Here is one way of practicing intervals: Look at

a page of any piece of music, and see how fast you can spot all the seconds, thirds,

fourths and so on. Concentrate on one or two intervals at a time – become a fifth or

octave expert before you go on to sixths or sevenths. Look for your intervals both

horizontally (intervals between notes struck simultaneously) and vertically (intervals

between the individual notes of a melody).

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Seven further steps – perfecting your performance

Now that you have prepared yourself properly, you are ready to try the real thing!

Steps 4 to 9 all deal with actual sight-reading strategies: what you need to think of

when you have got a page of music in front of you that you want to play instantly.

The concluding tenth step deals with sight-reading away from the piano, which will

add efficiency to your practicing and even more security in every real sight-reading

situation.

Step 4: Abandon fear and embarrassment

If you consider yourself a fairly good piano player but a poor sight-reader, you will

probably feel annoyed and frustrated by the fact that you are making so many

mistakes when playing at sight. Don’t let those feelings keep you from trying! Don’t

feel ashamed if you have to start practicing your sight-reading with pieces that are

much less technically advanced than the repertoire pieces you are used to be able

to perform brilliantly.

In the ensemble sight-reading situation, when it is of absolute importance that you

keep a steady beat and that you are aware of what the other players are doing, it

might be necessary to simply skip a lot of notes that you can’t decipher instantly or

that are too difficult to play properly at a first run through. If you are used to

practicing every detail very thoroughly before trying a performance, this kind of

“cheating” may almost feel like a crime!

There is no reason to be ashamed though. The people that you are making music

with will appreciate your playing much more if you are alert to their playing and give

them the most important notes or chords in time, than if you are just desperately

struggling to get all your own notes in.

Step 5: View sight-reading as a musical activity, not an exercise

Like the previous one, this tip is also meant to take some of the unnecessary prestige

and tension out of sight-reading. But the emphasis here is on why you are doing it at

all. All right, when preparing for your grade exams you may be forced to think about

sight reading as a test or an exercise. But don’t let that influence your whole view of

what sight-reading is about.

Consider reading music and translating it with ease to musical meaning and finger

movement one of the cornerstones of your art as a pianist. When you look at a fresh

page of sheet music, don’t view it as a complicated crossword-puzzle that you have

to decipher. Think instead of every phrase as a musical statement. In other words,

get into the same mindset as when you are reading the words and sentences of a

book. You shouldn’t be decoding your music one note at a time, you should be

reading it fluently in groups of notes. If you find this hard to implement, you are

probably trying to sight-read something that is still a bit too difficult for you. Try

something easier and work a bit more on the three initial steps.

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Step 6: Scan the page before you start

Remember that sight-reading doesn’t necessarily mean playing entirely without

preparation. In all the three sight-reading situations sketched above, you should

always be able to take time to at least look through the most important aspects of

the page of music that you are going to play. Just starting to play the first measure

without looking ahead to the rest of the music is downright stupidity and has nothing

to do with good sight-reading. This is where sight-reading music differs a little from

reading books.

So, what should you be looking for in these few, precious moments of preparation?

First of all, look at the things that the composer of your score began with. Before

writing down any of the notes, he or she gave the piece a time signature as well as a

key signature (unless you are sight-reading atonal music without a fixed beat, but

that’s another story). Consequently, these are by far the most important clues you

have. As long as you have done some solid practicing of rhythm and playing in

different keys, this will set you up very well for the task ahead.

Then look for any sort of recurring patterns of notes or rhythms on the page. And

don’t just look at them. If the situation allows, try them out. If not, try to imagine their

sound and prepare the placement of your hands and fingers. Make a note of

tempo, time or key signature changes ahead. Look for the quickest notes you will

have to play, and adjust your speed accordingly (that is if you are allowed to decide

a tempo for yourself). Then you are ready to go!

Step 7: Watch the music, not your hands

This tip is going to help you a lot, also when you are not sight-reading. A lot of pianists

look far too often at their hands, even when this is absolutely unnecessary. If you feel

that you may be guilty of this, consciously try to lift up your head and eyes when you

are playing a piece that you already know. Look at the music or just somewhere in

front of you if you are playing from memory. You will enjoy the feeling once you get

used to it.

To become a good sight-reader, it’s essential that you learn to trust your hands and

fingers to know what they are doing. If you have to keep looking down at the

keyboard every other note, you will never be able to sight-read with ease.

To prepare for this element of sight-reading, get used to playing all your pieces with

a minimum of looking at your hands. As already hinted, this will give you a new sense

of freedom which will improve the quality of your playing and increase your own

enjoyment of what you are doing.

Step 8: Always think about the next note(s)

So, you have scanned the page and are comfortable with keeping your eyes on the

music rather than your hands. But what exactly happens when you are able to read

and play fluently? Let’s go back to what is happening when you are reading the

words on this page. Unless you are just learning to read, or unless your English is very

bad, you are not reading letter by letter. You are reading words and sentences,

often imagining the sound of spoken words as you go along.

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When you are a fluent sight-reader, you read groups of notes at a time, imagining

the sound of each musical gesture or phrase the moment before you play it. This

sounds like magic, and in a way it is - but not more so than the fact that you can

speak, sing, read, type, walk or play tennis. You are already performing a lot of very

complicated tasks where your mind and body work together in the most remarkable

ways, without any sense of difficulty. Your goal should be to make sight-reading one

of these very natural activities.

If you are not there yet, go to the piano and sight-read something really, really easy.

It only has to be a couple of notes. The main point is that you should be able to grasp

the whole thing more or less at once. This will give you a foretaste of what fluent

sight-reading should feel like.

Step 9: Play slowly if you need to

This step applies most of all to the first sight-reading situation, the one where you are

simply reading through a new piece for your own sake. In the exam or ensemble

situation, you will be more limited in your choice of speed. In these latter situations,

there will be times when it might be best to sacrifice detail in favor of fluency. But

ultimately, your goal is of course to sight-read not only fluently but also correctly. That

is why, in the comfort of your practice room, it may be a good idea to take things

slowly.

An added benefit of this approach is that virtually anything can serve as a sight-

reading exercise. Perhaps you have one or two pieces that you are really fond of

and curious to get to know, but which are beyond your technical abilities at the

moment. Well, this is not an argument that should stop you from getting hold of the

score and sight-reading it at a speed that you can handle. Most technical problems

disappear if you play something sufficiently slowly. This enjoyable exercise will be very

beneficial for your general development. You’ll get to know your favorite piece even

better, and if and when you feel ready to play it properly you will already have

formed an idea of what the main problems are.

Step 10: Practice reading music away from the piano

Most of the tips I have given you here can be practiced both at the piano and away

from it. For example, if you want to practice the reading of rhythms or intervals, get

hold of any piece of music, sit down in your favorite armchair and start reading. Tap

the rhythms or try to spot intervals that you find tricky. Step 6 is also a very good one

to practice away from the instrument. Take a few minutes and just go through the

main clues of a score, just as you would do before playing it for the first time: time

and key signature, speed, dynamics, rhythmic and melodic recurring patterns,

important changes and so on.

To alternate between practicing with and without the piano is a very efficient way of

improving sight-reading. When you are not actually playing the piece, it is easier to

focus on a particular problem area: rhythm, accidentals or whatever. And you will

be able to scan a lot more music without having to go into every detail. If you go on

like this, constantly improving your ability to grasp a page of sheet music, your

knowledge of the piano repertoire will end up being very impressive.

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As Robert Schumann once wrote: “there is something magical about this veiled

enjoyment of soundless music.” Let this be a motto for your sight-reading practice: to

be able to enjoy the music just by looking at the notes should be one of your main

goals. When you have achieved that, every improvement of your technical ability

will give you instant access to new parts of the piano repertoire.