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Get better at sight-reading with these tips

Last week we talked about why sight-reading is an important skill to have. This week I will let you in on the simplest, yet most effective techniques to up your sight-reading game.

Sight-read a little daily

Although sight-reading should be fairly easy at the beginner/intermediate levels, the majority of young players have a hard time due to lack of exposure. If your private teacher hasn’t been doing this with you ask them to incorporate it in your lessons.

Remember, if you don’t do it, you will not get good at it. 

To start reading every day you can use my 10 simple melodies, use your music books or a friends, dig through your band’s library and ask you teacher to borrow books. 

Stuff is out there, so go get it!

Rhythm is king

When practicing sight-reading focus on the rhythm first, notes later. This will seem weird at first but in the long run this is how you become a proficient reader. You know the notes, it’s the rhythms that get you. So, if you focus on the rhythms 100% of the time they will eventually become second nature, just like notes.

When you focus on rhythms you might find yourself missing more notes. That’s okay! Miss notes for now and focus on keeping the rhythm intact. If you practice this daily you can see results in as little as one sitting. You read that right. I have seen it time and again with my students. They struggle to sight-read, but once they shift their focus to rhythmic accuracy everything falls into place. 

Use a metronome

Although you won’t normally have access to a metronome in a sight-reading situation such as an audition, it is good to use for practicing.

The metronome acts as a constant reminder to keep your rhythm steady. Turn it on to an easy going tempo like 86bpm and make sure you wait for…

The 4-click count off

I can’t tell you how often I see students turn on a metronome to sight-read, only to completely ignore it from the get go. If this is you, get in the habit of listening to the click for a full 8 beats, then do a 4-click count off in your mind before you begin, as if someone was counting you off.

All together it should look like this:

*click* *click* *click* *click*

*click* *click* *click* *click* (put your trumpet up)

One, two, three, four (breath on 4)

Play on the downbeat of 1

Waiting in this manner lets the tempo “sink in” and sets you up for success.


That wraps it up for the best sight-reading tips. If you missed last week’s post on why sight-reading is a great skill to have check it out to complete this post’s teachings. Get to work and let me know if these tips helped you!

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Why Is Sight-Reading Important https://www.trumpetheadquarters.com/why-is-sight-reading-important/ https://www.trumpetheadquarters.com/why-is-sight-reading-important/#respond Sat, 15 Feb 2020 17:41:53 +0000 https://www.staging3.trumpetheadquarters.com/?p=2843 Let’s face it, developing sight-reading skills is tough and this is why most people ignore working on the skill. Most beginner and intermediate players see it as an “extra” skill that can be cast aside since they don’t really need it right at this moment. Let me tell why you should be sight-reading daily.

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Let’s Face It, Developing Sight-Reading Skills Is Tough

This is how most people feel and consequently, they ignore working on the skill. Most beginner and intermediate players see it as an “extra” skill that can be cast aside since they don’t really need it right at this moment. Since they don’t need it for the performance, it is forgotten, like sight-reading is not important. They have the sheet music that they need to work on, so why bother?

If this sounds like you, I’m about to tell you why you should bother. Maybe it sounds like your students. Or maybe you’re an advanced player and you sight-read fairly well, but you want to be better. That’s good, we never stop learning!

You’re training to learn faster

Isn’t it just exhausting to get a new solo for, say, an audition and spend hours upon hours just trying to figure out notes and rhythms? What if notes and rhythms could be done in under an hour?

An excellent sight-reader will learn new solos much faster. They will be able to have notes, rhythms, dynamics and articulation down in less than a an hour.

If you can read it through and catch all the notes and rhythms quickly, then you can spend the rest of your time working on what really matters, musicality.

You NEED to develop this skill

A lot of young players dislike sight-reading, some are scared of it and others even hate it. But you have to start doing it daily, not just at concert band assessments.

You see, sight-reading is like knowing how to read words. Actually, it’s exactly the same. People who can’t read can still speak by listening to others and mimicking the sounds. This is what you as a musician might do in band. You get new music and overtime you learn how to play it simply by osmosis. This is NOT good. It’s like saying you’re a fluent Chinese speaker because you can say words. While you can absolutely get around by just speaking, what happens when you get lost and can’t read the street signs or your traffic ticket?

You will get a confidence boost

Feeling ready to read anything gives you that extra edge against your competition. You will be able to arrive at auditions, gigs or simply the first day of concert band at school or college, feeling good, relaxed and prepared.

Also, confidence is something that not only shows in your demeanor but also comes through your tone. It’s an all-in-one music vitamin.

You will have more fun

Naturally, practicing can sometimes get boring due its monotonous nature. We play the same or similar warm-ups and routine drills on a daily basis, and this repetitive pattern can wear our musicianship down over time.

The warm-up and routine are inevitable and must be done daily, but after that’s finished we have choices. However, these choices can be severely limited by your sight-reading skills. If you are not doing so great at sight-reading, then you will probably go to the same etude or solo you’ve been working on and play it again…

Kill that habit by instead pulling out a new book, opening it to any page and just reading. You can also try my simple melodies as your sight-reading exercises.


Now that you know why developing this skill is so important, look out for the next blog to see how you can get better at sight-reading. Keep playing and have fun!

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