I love your bite-sized music theory lessons! And they're spaced perfectly apart, giving me enough time to internalize them practically before moving on!
Haha. Weird! But whatever works for you! This seems like on of those things where whatever you learned first feels like the best for you. I’m not a fan of the 2nd and 4th 16th having the same syllable though. When I say “the ‘e’ of beat 4”, there’s no confusion because it only means one thing. But “the ta of beat 4” could mean two different things.
Interesting. And you think it’s easier and better because it’s easier to say? Aside from one being less familiar, they don’t feel wildly different as far as effort to pronounce, at least not in my accent. . I’m not sure I see a functional difference(other than what I said about two beats being the same).
@@BradHarrison Look at yourself in the mirror and say each one slowly. The standard one uses many facial muscles, the other just uses the tongue. Try thinking each with a metronome. I find much easier and faster to use the Stetson method. PS. Stetson school of music in Deland Florida is one of the premier music schools in the nation.
Can we talk about how learning music can be different for those who are disabled, deaf, autistic and neurodivergent. I enjoy these videos because they help me develop new insights as a musician. There is sadly a lack of discussion when it comes to musicians who are disabled.
Thank you so much Brad for sharing this a lot of learning with us as a Teacher... This is a big help in our references in Music technique and useful for our students... upload more on this matter even transposition - thank you again Brad Harrison.
I been needing to count beats correctly and I think I found the right video that helped a lil bit because I understand it a bit better now. Now I need to put it to practice. Glad I came around this video cause imma take notes on it. If only there was pdf of it but since there isn't, this is the only one I came across and now I'm thankful for it. So the Counting beats 1&2 3e&a 4 stuff is called Syncopated Rythems?? I like to play the Piano but at 25, this is the Hardest of them
5:20 is correct. You could also count it as 1 + 2, but the important thing is that the eighth after is and(+) of 2 followed by 3. More info on dotted quarters here: ua-cam.com/video/b61ksoMCetc/v-deo.htmlsi=_nw1Gw4Qix5Jy8p8&t=187
Middle school band teacher here - I’m having a hard time getting my students to stop writing in note names. We do dedicated note naming activities and rhythm reading which they excel at but when it comes to actual sheet music, most need to write letter names first which leads to all the issues stated in the video. I feel like it shouldn’t be so hard since some students have only learned to play 6 notes so far and memorizing just 6 notes (location on the staff, letter name, and fingering for each note) shouldn’t be a lot. Any advice out there?
Maybe more sight reading practice exercises and don’t give them time to write it in? Can also do book/music checks and forbid writing note names in. They get marks for not having letter names written. And make them watch this video! ;-)
Thank you so much for the video! I will try your suggested tips! However, I would like to ask whether reading music sheets without performing would help me sightread better? I mean if reading music sheets like they were texts or books could also be considered a good way to practice sightreading? And would that help me when wanting to practice and play a piece? Again, thank you so much for your shared advice in the video!
I’ve actually got a video on subdivisions with lots of examples coming in a day or two! Triplets will be covered. I mention quintuplets but don’t really get into them much. But it’s all the same. Just evenly space them out in the beat. Count along slowly with a metronome and make sure you land on the right beat after the tuplet. If you’re early, slow down, if you’re late speed up. Make sure they’re smooth and evenly spaced out. Good luck!
By me being self taught, I often am overwhelmed because I’m on level one or two but keep picking songs from level 42 and when I can’t play them I fall into depression, thinking something’s wrong with me. Is there a video outlining the different levels and what should be expected on those levels until we can play level 42?😳
He mentioned this in part 1 of the sight reading series: ua-cam.com/video/K2DrG2CpDwA/v-deo.html=6m20s In this section of the video, he describes the difference between easy, medium, and hard difficulty music and basically what sightreading is all about.
It’s huge. I’ve got a some exercises I’m going to cover in either part 3 or 4. Not sure which yet. If you can get in the habit, it can really bump your reading skills.
Accidentals are sharps, flats, and naturals. If a note is marked with one of those, every other time that note shows up in the bar, the accidental still applies, unless otherwise marked. It saves you from having to write/read a bunch of superfluous flat signs or whatever.
For some reason, this kid in my Beginning Band that is oh most in the 7th grade band doesn’t know Trombone Slide Positions or the Posture’s or even tapping their foot. Edit: He also barely knows how to read music OR count music and he always “forgets” to bring his music book and trombone home
Ive been practicing sightreading for years and im still bad at it. So idk what im doing wrong, but i think ima just give up. Just more wasting time and money.
I’m pretty sure that’s a different type of service. It’s for theory lessons and exercises(which can be helpful for reading in a roundabout way) but it’s not for practicing sight reading per se, not like The Sight Reading Factory.
Merci beaucoup. I'll check out the SRF soon. You've convinced moi.
Je l’ai pris lors de la vidéo précédente 👌
I love your bite-sized music theory lessons! And they're spaced perfectly apart, giving me enough time to internalize them practically before moving on!
As a piano player who has been sight reading every lesson I can say I read the cbat and nyan cat pretty well
Lmao. Good catch!
Gotta love the H2G2 reference at 4:44 !
Not too many people have caught that one!
What a videoooooooooooo. Wow finally some explained it to me as easy as it is
Stetson school of music taught me to count: 1-te 2-te 3-te 4-te; 1-ta-te-ta etc. Triplets: 1-lol-ly. Much easier to vocalize and faster to think.
Haha. Weird! But whatever works for you! This seems like on of those things where whatever you learned first feels like the best for you. I’m not a fan of the 2nd and 4th 16th having the same syllable though. When I say “the ‘e’ of beat 4”, there’s no confusion because it only means one thing. But “the ta of beat 4” could mean two different things.
@@BradHarrison I 1st learned 1e&a. Was 30 when I went to Stetson. New method of counting improved my musicianship incredibly.
Interesting. And you think it’s easier and better because it’s easier to say? Aside from one being less familiar, they don’t feel wildly different as far as effort to pronounce, at least not in my accent. . I’m not sure I see a functional difference(other than what I said about two beats being the same).
@@BradHarrison Look at yourself in the mirror and say each one slowly. The standard one uses many facial muscles, the other just uses the tongue. Try thinking each with a metronome. I find much easier and faster to use the Stetson method.
PS. Stetson school of music in Deland Florida is one of the premier music schools in the nation.
Can we talk about how learning music can be different for those who are disabled, deaf, autistic and neurodivergent. I enjoy these videos because they help me develop new insights as a musician. There is sadly a lack of discussion when it comes to musicians who are disabled.
Thank you so much Brad for sharing this a lot of learning with us as a Teacher... This is a big help in our references in Music technique and useful for our students... upload more on this matter even transposition - thank you again Brad Harrison.
I been needing to count beats correctly and I think I found the right video that helped a lil bit because I understand it a bit better now. Now I need to put it to practice. Glad I came around this video cause imma take notes on it. If only there was pdf of it but since there isn't, this is the only one I came across and now I'm thankful for it. So the Counting beats 1&2 3e&a 4 stuff is called Syncopated Rythems?? I like to play the Piano but at 25, this is the Hardest of them
This was helpful
Helpful. Thank you from TExas!
Is 5:20 correct? Dotted quarter note isn't 1 + a? Then first quarter note is the second beat?
5:20 is correct. You could also count it as 1 + 2, but the important thing is that the eighth after is and(+) of 2 followed by 3. More info on dotted quarters here: ua-cam.com/video/b61ksoMCetc/v-deo.htmlsi=_nw1Gw4Qix5Jy8p8&t=187
@@BradHarrison God bless ya!
Where was this video when I was auditioning for the tab choir haha Learned so much!
Loved the video! Waiting for part 3 :D
Coming very soon!
Middle school band teacher here - I’m having a hard time getting my students to stop writing in note names. We do dedicated note naming activities and rhythm reading which they excel at but when it comes to actual sheet music, most need to write letter names first which leads to all the issues stated in the video. I feel like it shouldn’t be so hard since some students have only learned to play 6 notes so far and memorizing just 6 notes (location on the staff, letter name, and fingering for each note) shouldn’t be a lot. Any advice out there?
Maybe more sight reading practice exercises and don’t give them time to write it in? Can also do book/music checks and forbid writing note names in. They get marks for not having letter names written. And make them watch this video! ;-)
Thank you so much for the video! I will try your suggested tips! However, I would like to ask whether reading music sheets without performing would help me sightread better? I mean if reading music sheets like they were texts or books could also be considered a good way to practice sightreading? And would that help me when wanting to practice and play a piece? Again, thank you so much for your shared advice in the video!
Of course! Sight reading doesn’t just happen in front of an audience. You can and should practice it alone in practice sessions.
How about intermediates?
Could you also make a video on that?
That’s going to be part 3! I’m planning on 4 parts to the series. Let me know if you have any questions, thoughts, or suggestions!
@@BradHarrison ok thanks!
Thanks for replying have a great day and gl with the next parts!
How can I read triplets or quintuplets?
Good video
I’ve actually got a video on subdivisions with lots of examples coming in a day or two! Triplets will be covered. I mention quintuplets but don’t really get into them much. But it’s all the same. Just evenly space them out in the beat. Count along slowly with a metronome and make sure you land on the right beat after the tuplet. If you’re early, slow down, if you’re late speed up. Make sure they’re smooth and evenly spaced out. Good luck!
2:05 The last 3 notes of Hot Cross Icing should be labelled G, F, E, not A, G, F smh my head
Lmao. Keep watching! ;-)
Thanks Mabel
Haha. Hey, Mabel. I missed your user name. Thanks for pointing it out, Peter. Good to see you folks here. Always happy to have the support!
By me being self taught, I often am overwhelmed because I’m on level one or two but keep picking songs from level 42 and when I can’t play them I fall into depression, thinking something’s wrong with me. Is there a video outlining the different levels and what should be expected on those levels until we can play level 42?😳
He mentioned this in part 1 of the sight reading series: ua-cam.com/video/K2DrG2CpDwA/v-deo.html=6m20s
In this section of the video, he describes the difference between easy, medium, and hard difficulty music and basically what sightreading is all about.
Also, if the link doesn't take you to the right section, it's at 6:20, and the video chapter is called "Finding Appropriate Material".
Level 42... I see what you did there...
;-)
sight reading part 3 ?? I don't see it listed on your channel
ua-cam.com/video/EChP9Naj_Ow/v-deo.htmlsi=x2u2ctxedGplhvrZ
Hello, I'm a semi pro musician and personaly I struggle a lot with the "read in advance" thing if you see what I mean
It’s huge. I’ve got a some exercises I’m going to cover in either part 3 or 4. Not sure which yet. If you can get in the habit, it can really bump your reading skills.
@@BradHarrison I personaly think that i'm almost reading in the past ...
Nobody is talking about the fact that he rick rolled us with the example at 7:19
What do you mean by accidentals last for the whole bar
Accidentals are sharps, flats, and naturals. If a note is marked with one of those, every other time that note shows up in the bar, the accidental still applies, unless otherwise marked. It saves you from having to write/read a bunch of superfluous flat signs or whatever.
Not getting sound on demo.
Looks like SRF doesn't give the user any feedback as to whether they've succeeded?
There’s a play-along feature built in!Listen to the playback, either while reading or afterwards, and see if you’re matching up.
@@BradHarrison thanks I'll give it a go :)
Excellent! Let me know how to like it!
AHHHH
3:52 the Lick?
You bet! And it shows up a few times.
For some reason, this kid in my Beginning Band that is oh most in the 7th grade band doesn’t know Trombone Slide Positions or the Posture’s or even tapping their foot.
Edit: He also barely knows how to read music OR count music and he always “forgets” to bring his music book and trombone home
That’s always tough. A lot of people just learn by ear and by rote. It can be useful but it’s the opposite of reading, which is such a useful skill.
Could the kid have a learning disability of some sort? This could be impacting his ability to do certain musical tasks.
@@kaishawna3753 He has no learning disability.
Ive been practicing sightreading for years and im still bad at it. So idk what im doing wrong, but i think ima just give up. Just more wasting time and money.
Have you spoken to a teacher about it? Joining a band where you have to read regularly can be really helpful too.
In my school piano class, I've been using Breezing Thru Theory. Is it very useful for sight reading?
I’m pretty sure that’s a different type of service. It’s for theory lessons and exercises(which can be helpful for reading in a roundabout way) but it’s not for practicing sight reading per se, not like The Sight Reading Factory.