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eyond
any doubt, Franz Liszt was the greatest sight reader
who ever lived, and all musicians of the nineteenth
century testified to his miraculous powers. An American
composer named Otis B. Boise visited him at Weimar
in 1876 bearing a full orchestral score. Liszt asked
him to play it, Boise tells the following story:
"There has never been an occasion in my career when
my pianistic caliber seemed to me so small, as when
I for that moment contemplated exhibiting it for
the first time to that great master; and I also
felt that my innocent composition would suffer in
his esteem through its shortcomings. He evidently
noticed my worry and relieved me at once by saying,
'I think after all I should obtain a better idea
of details if I play it myself. 'Accordingly he
seated himself, glanced at the instrumental scheme,
turned his mind, began the most astoundingly coherent
rendering of an orchestral score that I had heard
and such as I never since heard from another musician.
Those who have attempted such tasks know that the
ten fingers being inadequate to the performance
of all the details, it is necessary to cull such
essentials from the mass of voices as well as clear
the line of development. Liszt did this simultaneously.
No features of the workmanship, contrapuntal or
instrumental, escaped his notice, and he made running
comments without interrupting his progress." |
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It is an unfortunate circumstance that many
guitarists are poor sight readers. In a musical world where
the guitar is still not always respected as a "legitimate"
instrument, I am sometimes embarrassed when colleagues who
play other instruments tell me they tried to play chamber
music with this or that guitarist but found it frustrating
or impossible because the guitarist could not read well enough.
Or, closer to home, I have had students at the University
of Missouri who simply could not keep up with the demands
of our guitar program because it took them half of the semester
to learn the notes to their pieces leaving little time to
master them. Most musicians recognize the obvious importance
of sight reading in areas of the profession such as accompanying,
teaching, ensemble playing, and radio, television, and film
studio work. But what about the amateur guitarist, or the
guitarist who aspires to be a solo performer. Of what value
is sight reading to them?
Fluency helps make one's study of the guitar easier and more
pleasurable. First of all, the study of sight reading gives
the player fluency. It gives a student a chance to learn a
new piece before he tires of it. When learning a new piece,
a student is most likely to be discouraged by the initial
contact-wading through the maze of incomprehensible notes,
signs, and symbols, all of which may present few technical
problems once he has learned to read them. (This is especially
apropos of anyone attempting to learn modern music.) Therefore,
fluency helps make one's study of the guitar easier and more
pleasurable. After all, one of the main virtues of being a
musician is the pleasure music can give us. It should not
be a battle to learn a new piece of music!
The second value of good sight reading is the access and familiarity
it gives to a wide variety of literature that we otherwise
might not get to know. Yes, we can listen to recordings to
hear unfamiliar literature, but not all the good or interesting
literature is recorded. There are hundreds of brilliant compositions
waiting to be discovered. In fact, for the guitarist aspiring
to be a concert performer it is almost imperative that he
find music that has not been recorded to help establish his
own artistic profile and personality. The good sight reader
has an open door to a broad acquaintance with a wide range
of music. Those guitarists interested in transcribing music
will find the ability to sight-read a gift from heaven. It
will save time in finding suitable works to transcribe and
make the process of transcription quicker, more efficient,
and more enjoyable.
Finally, extensive sight reading will introduce many new technical,
stylistic, and interpretive experiences that will contribute
directly to the artistic grasp of the pieces selected for
more formal study. Thanks to this wealth of experience one
may study a particular fugue or sonata not in isolation, but
in relation to the whole literature of fugues or sonatas.
Vladimir Horowitz, perhaps the greatest pianist of our time,
once said in an interview, "This year I play two pieces of
Faure. First of all, I studied the whole composer. I play
everything he wrote. Ensemble music, everything, I play myself-not
listen to recordings. Records are not the truth. They are
like post cards of a beautiful landscape. You bring the post
cards home so when you look at them you will remember how
beautiful is the truth. So I play. I'm a very good sight reader.
The texture of the music talks to me, the style. I feel the
music, the spiritual content of his compositions." Yes, feeling
the style of the music and the spiritual content can only
be experienced by playing it, not by listening to records.
Like Horowitz, I believe the concert guitarist cannot truly
feel and understand the style and content of say, Bach's Lute
Suite No. 4 without also studying, at the very least, the
other three Lute Suites and their versions for unaccompanied
violin.
Recognizing the importance of the ability to sight-read, what
is the best way to learn or improve this skill? Read, read,
and read. The prescription for learning to sight-read is to
sight-read. But sight reading must be studied systematically
with a panorama of music mapped out in advance. And one need
not practice reading for hours everyday. Just ten minutes
daily everyday will result in tremendous improvement in one
month. To start, one must read very elementary music. Of course
before sight reading begins, the intermediate and advanced
guitarist must know the notes on the fingerboard through the
twelfth fret. If he does not know them real well, that is
o.k.-sight reading will improve his familiarity with them
quickly. In my experience I find most guitarists read fairly
well in the lower positions. But above the fourth fret they
are lost. Therefore the initial goal most guitarist should
set for themselves is to be able to sight-read virtually any
single line melody in any position of the guitar. I recommend
that most students start their sight reading with beginning
violin methods. They are single line melodies and the fingering
notations will have no meaning to the guitarist, allowing
him to concentrate fully on the notes. I strongly recommend
that the guitarist just beginning sight reading stay away
from guitar music. It is usually fairly heavily fingered and
can lead to the student sight-reading fingerings instead of
music.
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