This is the Fastest Method to Reading Sheet Music

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- Your piano teacher Tim here and, today, I'm gonna show you the fastest possible way to read music. I want to quickly mention that, before you can understand the technique that we're gonna be talking about today, you first have to understand two things. One, how to read notes using the lines and spaces on staff for the treble clef and the bass clef. You also have to know about intervals and how to use those to read notes faster. I'm gonna quickly walk you through and catch you up, if you don't know about that stuff but, if you do know all these basics already, skip to here in the video. I'm gonna put a time stamp for you to the technique we're gonna talk about today. So you have to know about how to read notes on both the treble clef and the bass clef. Now, most of the time, the treble clef is gonna be played with your right hand, bass clef played with your left hand. And, as you can see here, the staff is made up of five lines and four spaces in between those lines. And, as can see, I have a note here on each of the lines right here. The lines of the treble clef are as follows, E, G, B, D and F. You can also use a saying to remember all of these, so you can use Every Good Boy Deserves Fries or something, so long as the first letters of the saying match up. The spaces of the treble clef are as follows, they spell the word face. Now, when you're doing these and you're figuring these out, please, please, please remember to go from the bottom of the staff to the top of the staff. If you do it the other way, you're gonna get the notes wrong every time. So E, G, B, D and F for the lines, F, A, C, E, spaces. All right, let's go on to the bass clef. The lines of the bass clef, pretty simple, are G, B, D, F and A, or Great Big Dogs Fight Animals. Spaces of the bass clef are All Cows Eat Grass or A, C, E, G. You're gonna have to become familiar with these. Spend some time on this part of the lesson, memorizing the lines and spaces for each clef. because now what we're gonna talk about are intervals. An interval is the distance between two notes, and you can use them to read notes way faster. So, if you have a note, say that F there, and then you have another note, this is what's called a unison. These are literally the same note and, unfortunately on a piano with only one piano, you can't even play a unison 'cause you can only hit one key down once at a time, but just to let you know that. And then the intervals go from there onto what's called a second, meaning just that they're two notes apart. Let me show you here with the piano in here. So you have F and G (plays two notes consecutively), that is a second. And one thing I want to show you about seconds, let me draw it like this, that seconds are so close together (plays two notes consecutively) that they have to be stacked side by side. They're still like on top of one another but from left to right a little bit because otherwise they'd be colliding with one another. One thing I want to mention is intervals go from seconds up to what we call octaves which are eighths, and actually beyond. But you want to become familiar with up to an octave. All even number intervals don't match, and what I mean by this is, if one of the notes is a space, the other one's a line. So, if I have this, I know that, and we've moved a little further apart, notice how they move from side to side to more of a vertical stance here. They can appear differently, I'll show you in a minute. But this is an even number interval just identifying it by sight right away because this is a space and this is a line. Is it now an even number interval? No, they're both lines. So, even numbers, they do not match. Odd number intervals, however, they do match, meaning if this is a space, this is a space. If this one's a line, this one's gonna be a line. It doesn't matter whether it's right here, here or even here, you know that that's some kind of odd numbered interval. So, use that to your advantage. Seconds are really easy to identify 'cause they're right next to each other like I mentioned. Thirds are easy to identify 'cause it looks like the beginning of a snowman thing, evenly stacked. And it doesn't matter where they are on the staff or even off the staff. If it's stacked like that, it's always a third, and that just means that these notes are (plays two notes together) three notes away, one (plays note), two (plays note), three (plays note), just like that. Fourth, they don't match, and you have a little bit of a space in between here, but not too large, and you know it's not a second because they're not (plays two notes together) smushed together, (plays two notes together) they're a little bit further. They're four notes away, one (plays note), two (plays note), three (plays note), four (plays note), just like that. So, memorize where all these are. Fifths are always like this, where they're evenly stacked, but there's always an empty space or an empty line in the middle. So, if this one starts on a line, that one's gonna be on a line 'cause it's an odd number interval, five, and there's gonna be an empty line there. So that's how you find fifths. By the way, these are the same with treble clef and bass clef. So I'm only gonna show you on treble clef. This interval, what do you think it is? (plays two notes consecutively) well, it has to be an even number 'cause they don't match. And it's one (plays note), two (plays note), three (plays note), four (plays note), five (plays note), (plays note) six notes away, right there. So that's a sixth (plays two notes together). It's like a fourth 'cause a fourth is here, remember, but a little bit further apart. And then sevenths, they match but they're pretty far apart. You actually have either two lines that are empty or two spaces that are empty, depending on where these bad boys fall. So, if it falls here, you know that that's a seventh right away. And then, like I said, you want to learn up to an octave, which is the same (plays two notes consecutively) note again just an octave apart, eight notes apart, one (plays note), two (plays note), three (plays note), four (plays note), five (plays note), six (plays note), seven (plays note), eight (plays note). And, in this case, you want to count the note (plays note) you're starting with (plays note) and the ending note to make sure you get there. So that's an octave right away. So, this is all the basics you need to know to know this next part, which is the main part of this lesson. Now the reason we're here today is to build on this. And today we're gonna talk about the secret, which I call interval clusters or just note clusters because they're not always intervals. And I'll explain here in a second. So say we have something complicated like this, where you have four notes. Now you could individually read each note, be like that's an E (plays note), next one's an F (plays note), oh the next one's a B (plays note), the next one's a D (plays note). Well, especially if you're not used to reading the notes up and down on the staff really fast, it's gonna take you way longer than if you do this. Here's a cluster, that's an interval, right? That's a second right there. What about these bad boys? That's clearly a third. And then what about the distance between here and that note there? Well that's gonna be, well let's see, there's a space here, there's a line there, that's gonna be a fourth. Now, first it's gonna take you a bit longer, but trust me on this. When you get super good at intervals, you're gonna know (plays notes) to be able to read these super duper fast. So here, let me change it back to the piano view here. Here you have (plays notes) your bottom note E, I would read that note just by itself. You know there's a second there, a fourth (plays notes individually), one, two, three, four, four notes away (plays notes together), and then a third (plays notes together) stacked on top of there, and it sounds absolutely dreadful 'cause it's not a real chord, just show you as an example. Clusters are also useful in reading notes that are way up off the staff. Like, what in the world is this note way up here? Now you could memorize your ledger lines, which I recommend you do anyway. What you can do is you can say, okay the distance between these two is a third, and then the distance between these two is a fifth because they match just like that. You read the bottom note, D (plays note), and then you know it's a third above and then a fifth above, meaning (plays note) that note up there is C. Clusters aren't just intervals. Now what I mean by that, what I recommend you do, is really learn about your major, minor, diminished and augmented chords. Because what's gonna happen is, eventually you're gonna read that, and you could say, okay those are stacks of thirds, and that's fine. Or you can, if you're so good at chords, you can say, okay that's an F major chord (plays chord), and I know exactly where to play that. So, in context of a piece, which I'll show you here in a minute as a example, you're gonna be able to pick those out and read those, no problem. Now, chords don't always appear like that. They can appear maybe something like this. Let me get something in here for us. They can appear something like this, where you have the bottom note (plays note) of the chord (plays notes together) and then the top notes of the chord just like that. They can even appear one note at a time, called an arpeggio. So something like this (plays individual notes), just like that. Or you can read them as thirds going from left to right. But it is easier if you learn how to identify, not only the intervals, chords and then also what I'm gonna show you right now, which are scales. Now teachers torture students with scales all the time, but it isn't meant to be torture. It actually has a very good reason behind why we make you learn your scales. And one of the reasons is that, if you get really good at scales, you can learn to identify them by sight. It's not the only reason. There's actually a lot of other good reasons. One has to do with being able to figure out the notes that belong in a key. But anyway, if I see this pattern of notes here, sure I could individually read each note, or I could determine what the intervals are, things like that. But, if I can see it and identify it right away (plays scale), I know that's a C major scale, and if I'm used to playing (plays scale) the scale, I also know the correct finger pattern to use to play up and down the key word effectively. Let me show you a couple real examples in real sheet music. So this is a selection from the Pathetique Sonata and, as you can see, things are getting pretty hairy here in this first measure. What in the world is going on with that right hand? What in the world is going on with the left hand down here? Well, let's use our technique, shall we, to figure out what in the world is going on. Well, first things first, is we probably know what that top note is in the treble clef, and you probably know that as F, hopefully. Now the question is, what is this note right here? Well that note, think about it for a second. They don't match, so it's an even number interval of some type. And here's a little pro tip for you. If you have a note (plays note), one note, and then the next note goes way up off the staff (plays two notes consecutively), 99% of the time it's an octave (plays notes individually). You want to check to make sure, but most of the time it's an octave, and I know it's an octave 'cause I can identify these from sight, and they also don't match, meaning that it's an even number interval. So I know (plays notes) that this is actually a scale pattern in F minor, or maybe even in a part of an A flat major scale pattern, coming down an octave. If you like this lesson, make sure you smash that like button. It lets other students know this was a quality lesson that they can learn from as well. In terms of what you should watch next on YouTube, if you felt like I went really fast through the beginning topics today, which I did 'cause I wanted to get to the meat of the lesson, check out this playlist here where I have some lessons where I go through the beginner stuff a little bit slower, how to read notes on the staff a bit slower, how to do the intervals a bit slower.
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Channel: Piano Lessons On The Web
Views: 611,487
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Keywords: how to read sheet music, how to, sight reading, how to read music, sheet music, bass clef, learn piano, how to read music for beginners, how to read music notes, reading music, read music, read, music, music theory, how to read, piano lessons, piano tutorial, treble clef, how to read music for piano, sight reading piano, piano sight reading, how to read sheet music faster, piano, lesson, tutorial, fast, faster, notes, intervals, clusters, ledger lines, how to play piano
Id: zV6mG9NcQR8
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Length: 12min 51sec (771 seconds)
Published: Tue Mar 26 2019
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