francine wrote:hesitz wrote:Interval as a musical concept has nothing to do with five fingers or with hand position or fingering at all.
well, not _entirely_ nothing...
Yes, I carried it too far. But even in that case I think it's more that fingering depends on intervals. Intervals themselves don't depend on fingering.
For the original poster, I would suggest a couple things.
1. Don't expect to get good at sight reading without a lot of work. Getting good at it is something that will happen over years, not days. You should be able to notice improvement over shorter periods, weeks, months, but it may not improve as quickly as you want it to. Get used to it, that's how learning to play an instrument works. You will improve at sight reading more quickly if you do exercises focusing on it specifically, less quickly if you do it often but don't put laser focus on it. (Yes, obvious I know.)
2. As with many things in music, it helps to separate out what you're focusing on, things become too difficult if you're trying to learn more than one thing at once. If you're sight reading and trying to focus on correct fingering at the same time, that's too much. Limit it to one or the other. Do exercises with laser focus on a single concept.
3. In light of 2, above, as one exercise try sight reading and playing a note at a time, all with your index finger. Or, limit your sight reading to just reading off the note names, literally saying them aloud, playing nothing (you can do this anywhere, even without keyboard).
4. Sight reading is going to involve knowing keys and scales inside out. What note is a fifth above C when you're playing in C major? What note is a fifth above Bb when you're playing in F major? What note is a third above D in C Major? What note is a third above D in G Major? You should be quick with verbal answers to these, not depend on hand position or fingering to help you in some way (although you can focus on that separately).
I'm not a teacher, so take my suggestions with grain of salt. I'd also suggest watching the Nahre Sol video I posted above in this thread. I watched it recently and, while I think I was sort of doing each of the things she says, I wasn't necessarily focussing on all of them. Try devising separate exercises for yourself where you focus only on a single item among them. Over and over in learning music, you will find that it helps to distill out a single concept, laser focus on it in exercises, become comfortable with it, then over time slowly combine it with another concept. This combining of one thing with another (e.g., combining 1. recognizing notes/intervals by sight with 2. fingering) will sometimes feel like starting again at level 0, but it will be more doable and you can progress if you're comfortable with each item separately.
Finally, I would suggest trusting experts. If all the experts say focussing on identifying intervals is a key part of learning to sight read, accept that it probably is. If you don't think the experts are right, try to figure out why that is. Chances are (1) the experts are right, and (2) figuring out why the experts are right will point the way towards making better progress.
I guess one more thing. I get the feeling that you might want to relax, slow down, don't try to rush things. If you have the feeling that you "want to pull your hair out" then the practice you're doing is too complex; you need to simplify something and/or slow things down. This involves also changing your expectations of yourself. Doing practice at the appropriate level is of utmost importance. You want something that's challenging for you to do, but not too challenging. Whatever practice you're doing, it should feel like it's requiring you to focus, pay close attention, be at the top of your game. But it should not be too hard, it should never make you feel like you want to pull your hair out. If it does, that's a sign that you need to simplify things, either by (1) distilling things down to address a single concept (disregarding everything else) or (2) slowing down your playing, so your mind can process things. Eventually you will be able to combine concepts and speed things up, but always helpful first to separate concepts and address one at a time, and practice slowly (very slowly) before you go faster.
Last edited by hesitz (09-05-2023 18:20)