"Dry" music reading or how you call it
Posted: 07 Feb 2008, 00:09
Episode from my former (child) piano life.
I was practising some exercises and the Priest comes in for the yearly Easter benediction.
I take the stave of Gossec's "Gavotte" to play it for the guest, open it on the piano but, as it happens in these occasions, in the meantime there is some small talk between my father and the priest so I do not start playing immediately.
The good chap sees the stave, looks at it attentively for a couple of seconds and to the general surprise starts to tune the motive without having heard it.
Now, I understand that a kind of istinct is at play here which I do not seem to possess. Still, as it will be some time before I get to play a piano again, I wonder...
Is there some software, or book, or interactive thing which might help one to be able to "read the music" without playing it on the piano?
Even if I'll never be a genius a that (because if I had the gift I would know it by now) I would be glad for any suggestion which might help me in improving my "reading" skills.
Thank you so much
Nibbio
I was practising some exercises and the Priest comes in for the yearly Easter benediction.
I take the stave of Gossec's "Gavotte" to play it for the guest, open it on the piano but, as it happens in these occasions, in the meantime there is some small talk between my father and the priest so I do not start playing immediately.
The good chap sees the stave, looks at it attentively for a couple of seconds and to the general surprise starts to tune the motive without having heard it.
Now, I understand that a kind of istinct is at play here which I do not seem to possess. Still, as it will be some time before I get to play a piano again, I wonder...
Is there some software, or book, or interactive thing which might help one to be able to "read the music" without playing it on the piano?
Even if I'll never be a genius a that (because if I had the gift I would know it by now) I would be glad for any suggestion which might help me in improving my "reading" skills.
Thank you so much
Nibbio