Can you read sheet music??

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skullkrusher13

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#2 skullkrusher13
Member since 2004 • 8629 Posts
I can read notes and some symbols, I learned in an intro to music class
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dracula_16

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#3 dracula_16
Member since 2005 • 16042 Posts
I think I can still read some basic drum patterns. I learned from taking drum lessons a few years ago.
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Tuky06

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#4 Tuky06
Member since 2007 • 5026 Posts

I used to know how to read it, I forgot most of it though.

I learned in school, in art class.

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silence790

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#5 silence790
Member since 2008 • 1111 Posts
I know how to read keyboard notes, I used to play it a couple years ago. :D
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MoldOnHold

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#6 MoldOnHold
Member since 2005 • 11760 Posts

Way back in the day. It was mandatory for chorus in elementary school. :P

I completely forgot everything though.

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Quent1015

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#7 Quent1015
Member since 2004 • 507 Posts
I learned by taking piano lessons. I still read pieces and play, though.
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Ring_of_fire

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#8 Ring_of_fire
Member since 2003 • 15880 Posts
yes. I can read sheet music in Treble, Alto/Tenor (With some minor difficulties) and Bass clef. Learned by practicing :)
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User10293

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#9 User10293
Member since 2004 • 600 Posts
I learned from taking orchestra in school. I looked up "learn to read sheet music" on Google and that seemed to give some pretty good results. Maybe find sheet music online for some kid's songs while you learn.
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aaronmullan

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#10 aaronmullan
Member since 2004 • 33426 Posts
Some guitar.
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ShadowFlood

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#11 ShadowFlood
Member since 2004 • 773 Posts
Yes quite easily, but only really the treble clef, cause thats all I need. You could do stuff like EGBDF, every good boy does fine for the lines, or FACE for the spaces. but really the best way is to learn an instrument and get that fingering memorized with that note and the sheet.
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deactivated-5e0e408b026e3

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#12 deactivated-5e0e408b026e3
Member since 2006 • 7099 Posts
Yup I sure can. I learned from the about 4 or 5 years of classical guitar lessons I took. I am so surprised at how many of my "musician" friends that cant read it.
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m328

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#13 m328
Member since 2007 • 38 Posts

I know; treble and bass clef, and percussions.

All the things about the melody and the notes are actually fairly simple; the hard part IMO that has given me (and many people I know) nightmares is the rhythmic part :?

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MetroidPrimePwn

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#14 MetroidPrimePwn
Member since 2007 • 12399 Posts

I learned in a music class we had to take in Elementary School. I'm not one of those people who can learn songs by ear, and I can't memorize stuff off of videos, so reading sheet music is the only way I could learn how to play anything on piano.

As for learning how to read it, all I needed was those little acronyms for the notes on the bars (Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge for the treble and Good Boys Do Fine Always on the bass cleff).

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PlzDuntBanMe

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#15 PlzDuntBanMe
Member since 2008 • 3269 Posts
Yes, most of them
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needled24-7

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#16 needled24-7
Member since 2007 • 15902 Posts
I can read it (but once they start getting way below or high the 5 line things or whatever, I have a hard time), but I can't play it on my guitar, haha.
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dreamdude

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#17 dreamdude
Member since 2006 • 4627 Posts

It would be a bad idea for me to major in music if I could not read it.

I learned back in the 6th grade.

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Dead-Prez

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#18 Dead-Prez
Member since 2008 • 270 Posts
no i cant i find it hard
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logan_rulez

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#19 logan_rulez
Member since 2007 • 284 Posts
not even if my life depended on it.
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pianist

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#20 pianist
Member since 2003 • 18900 Posts
I should hope I can. And there's no mystery to learning to read sheet music. It's just a matter of practicing it, the same way you learned how to read words when you were younger. The more time you spend with it, the more quickly you will remember to associate what you see on the page with particular hand positions on the instrument. And eventually, you'll also be able to 'hear' the music you see on the page without actually playing it.
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DeeJayInphinity

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#21 DeeJayInphinity
Member since 2004 • 13415 Posts
Yeah but I'm slow. I need more practice.
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Lonelynight

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#22 Lonelynight
Member since 2006 • 30051 Posts
I'm taking the grade 5 theory exam this August so yes.
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Witchsight

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#23 Witchsight
Member since 2004 • 12145 Posts

Totally chinese to me. And ive played guitar for 6 years

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deactivated-5967f36c08c33

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#24 deactivated-5967f36c08c33
Member since 2006 • 15614 Posts
Yep,I can.I've been enrolled in the Choral program basically every year since I've been in school.
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pianist

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#25 pianist
Member since 2003 • 18900 Posts

I'm taking the grade 5 theory exam this August so yes.Lonelynight

It would suck to get to that exam, then have to tell yourself "Crap! I KNEW I forgot to learn something important!" :P

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Hewkii

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#26 Hewkii
Member since 2006 • 26339 Posts
yes, but I default to the instrument I learned first.
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ShaneBeck

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#27 ShaneBeck
Member since 2005 • 10511 Posts
It's easy. Every line and space has a name.

The treble clef starts on an E and the bass clef starts on a G and you just have to count up from the alphabet from there. The sharps and flats are either a semitone lower(flat) or a semitone higher(sharp) of the note they are beside. Time signature is the number of beats per measure. On a time signature, the above number is the amount of beats per bar and the lower number is the interval of notes they're using ie. 4/4 means 4 quarter notes per measure. Key signature shows the number of sharps or flats that are to always be played in a piece of music unless marked otherwise with a natural sign.

There, those are the essentials of music.
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Lonelynight

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#28 Lonelynight
Member since 2006 • 30051 Posts

[QUOTE="Lonelynight"]I'm taking the grade 5 theory exam this August so yes.pianist

It would suck to get to that exam, then have to tell yourself "Crap! I KNEW I forgot to learn something important!" :P

That would really suck, but I took a trial exam and got a 75% not a good score but there a lot of stupid mistakes that I made(like forgetting to finish the SATB)

Hope I can get a distinction in the actual exam.

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Lonelynight

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#29 Lonelynight
Member since 2006 • 30051 Posts

It's easy. Every line and space has a name.

The treble clef starts on an E and the bass clef starts on a G and you just have to count up from the alphabet from there. The sharps and flats are either a semitone lower(flat) or a semitone higher(sharp) of the note they are beside. Time signature is the number of beats per measure. On a time signature, the above number is the amount of beats per bar and the lower number is the interval of notes they're using ie. 4/4 means 4 quarter notes per measure. Key signature shows the number of sharps or flats that are to always be played in a piece of music unless marked otherwise with a natural sign.

There, those are the essentials of music.ShaneBeck

Ya, reading simple notes isn't very hard if you grasp the basics.

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pianist

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#30 pianist
Member since 2003 • 18900 Posts

It's easy. Every line and space has a name.

The treble clef starts on an E and the bass clef starts on a G and you just have to count up from the alphabet from there. The sharps and flats are either a semitone lower(flat) or a semitone higher(sharp) of the note they are beside. Time signature is the number of beats per measure. On a time signature, the above number is the amount of beats per bar and the lower number is the interval of notes they're using ie. 4/4 means 4 quarter notes per measure. Key signature shows the number of sharps or flats that are to always be played in a piece of music unless marked otherwise with a natural sign.

There, those are the essentials of music.ShaneBeck

The thing is that intellectually understanding the staff system is not difficult, but applying it is. When most people say they have trouble reading music, it's not that they can't figure out what a note is. It's that they can't translate that information into the correct physical response in real time.

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pianist

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#31 pianist
Member since 2003 • 18900 Posts
[QUOTE="pianist"]

[QUOTE="Lonelynight"]I'm taking the grade 5 theory exam this August so yes.Lonelynight

It would suck to get to that exam, then have to tell yourself "Crap! I KNEW I forgot to learn something important!" :P

That would really suck, but I took a trial exam and got a 75% not a good score but there a lot of stupid mistakes that I made(like forgetting to finish the SATB)

Hope I can get a distinction in the actual exam.

That's what trial exams are for. But I was referring to the rather proposterous notion of arriving at a grade 5 theory exam and realizing that you forgot to learn how to read music. Apparently, I failed at teh funnay.

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ShaneBeck

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#32 ShaneBeck
Member since 2005 • 10511 Posts

[QUOTE="ShaneBeck"]It's easy. Every line and space has a name.

The treble clef starts on an E and the bass clef starts on a G and you just have to count up from the alphabet from there. The sharps and flats are either a semitone lower(flat) or a semitone higher(sharp) of the note they are beside. Time signature is the number of beats per measure. On a time signature, the above number is the amount of beats per bar and the lower number is the interval of notes they're using ie. 4/4 means 4 quarter notes per measure. Key signature shows the number of sharps or flats that are to always be played in a piece of music unless marked otherwise with a natural sign.

There, those are the essentials of music.pianist

The thing is that intellectually understanding the staff system is not difficult, but applying it is. When most people say they have trouble reading music, it's not that they can't figure out what a note is. It's that they can't translate that information into the correct physical response in real time.



Meaning they can't operate an instrument properly?
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Grodus5

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#33 Grodus5
Member since 2006 • 7934 Posts
I can read Treble Clef music, just comes to you when you learn to play the violin:)
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Calabi_Yau

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#34 Calabi_Yau
Member since 2007 • 180 Posts

I can read sheet music relatively well for my age, and learning (as pianist noted) is only a matter of practice. Start with simple notes and rythms, listening to their actual sound, then gradual try to do it for your self. There are a variety of books on teh subject and if you are dilligent enough you will find yourself a capable music-reader within several months.

The hard part then, is to be able to 'sight-read' the music on your prefered instrument, which can take years and years to become effective at. good luck :)

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Oleg_Huzwog

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#35 Oleg_Huzwog
Member since 2007 • 21885 Posts

Alto clef is the most familiar to me, but I can still work my way through treble and bass.

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Lonelynight

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#36 Lonelynight
Member since 2006 • 30051 Posts
[QUOTE="Lonelynight"][QUOTE="pianist"]

[QUOTE="Lonelynight"]I'm taking the grade 5 theory exam this August so yes.pianist

It would suck to get to that exam, then have to tell yourself "Crap! I KNEW I forgot to learn something important!" :P

That would really suck, but I took a trial exam and got a 75% not a good score but there a lot of stupid mistakes that I made(like forgetting to finish the SATB)

Hope I can get a distinction in the actual exam.

That's what trial exams are for. But I was referring to the rather proposterous notion of arriving at a grade 5 theory exam and realizing that you forgot to learn how to read music. Apparently, I failed at teh funnay.

I don't think you failed at teh funnay, I'm just too stupid to figure out the joke :(

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pianist

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#37 pianist
Member since 2003 • 18900 Posts



Meaning they can't operate an instrument properly?ShaneBeck

Meaning that reading music is a two-stage process - you must first interpret what you see, then translate it into the proper physical response (i.e. playing the right note the right way at the simplest level). And because this has to occur in real-time, it is difficult to learn initially, even if you perfectly understand the theoretical concepts behind the staff system. Simply put, you can't just read up on the staff system and expect to be able to use it on any instrument at a whim. It may be easier to pick up other instruments after you understand staff notation - but you'll still struggle with the new instrument while you learn what the notation really MEANS in terms of playing that instrument.

I wouldn't say that you can't operate an instrument properly if you can't read music... because a lot of people learn by ear, and can get by just fine with simple music. They only run into problems when the music becomes too complicated to remember or to learn by listening to recordings.

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zepman71

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#38 zepman71
Member since 2005 • 4120 Posts

Piano and Brass sheet music? Yes

Guitar? No. I just use tabs or learn by ear

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ShaneBeck

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#39 ShaneBeck
Member since 2005 • 10511 Posts

Alto clef is the most familiar to me, but I can still work my way through treble and bass.

Oleg_Huzwog


That's a really peculiar clef to start out on. What instrument do you play?
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Oleg_Huzwog

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#40 Oleg_Huzwog
Member since 2007 • 21885 Posts
[QUOTE="Oleg_Huzwog"]

Alto clef is the most familiar to me, but I can still work my way through treble and bass.

ShaneBeck



That's a really peculiar clef to start out on. What instrument do you play?

I sit in the peculiar section of the orchestra - viola.

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ShaneBeck

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#41 ShaneBeck
Member since 2005 • 10511 Posts
[QUOTE="ShaneBeck"][QUOTE="Oleg_Huzwog"]

Alto clef is the most familiar to me, but I can still work my way through treble and bass.

Oleg_Huzwog



That's a really peculiar clef to start out on. What instrument do you play?

I sit in the peculiar section of the orchestra - viola.



I always thought most viola music was read from the treble clef. Then again, what do I know, all the instruments I play, you have to blow into. I've always been intrigued by strings but have yet to learn one.
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Ring_of_fire

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#42 Ring_of_fire
Member since 2003 • 15880 Posts
[QUOTE="ShaneBeck"][QUOTE="Oleg_Huzwog"]

Alto clef is the most familiar to me, but I can still work my way through treble and bass.

Oleg_Huzwog



That's a really peculiar clef to start out on. What instrument do you play?

I sit in the peculiar section of the orchestra - viola.

Oh, viola....The instrument tbat is a subject to a lot of jokes.....But.....I'll spare you :)

Come to think of it, the only music I can't read in sheet music, is the "new" way of writing music, like Penderecki's Threnody for Victims of Hiroshima. I can't read that type of sheet music :(

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Jon09

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#43 Jon09
Member since 2005 • 191 Posts
I tend not to go anywhere near 'sheet' music. :lol:
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pianist

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#44 pianist
Member since 2003 • 18900 Posts

Oh, viola....The instrument tbat is a subject to a lot of jokes.....But.....I'll spare you :)

Ring_of_fire

Unjustifiably so, it should be added. The viola is a beautiful instrument.

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euliaeulia

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#45 euliaeulia
Member since 2008 • 368 Posts
I used to play trumpet back in the day, I can't read sheet music anymore.
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Video_Game_King

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#46 Video_Game_King
Member since 2003 • 27545 Posts
I could probably look at it and get a general feel for the song.
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Ring_of_fire

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#47 Ring_of_fire
Member since 2003 • 15880 Posts
[QUOTE="Ring_of_fire"]

Oh, viola....The instrument tbat is a subject to a lot of jokes.....But.....I'll spare you :)

pianist

Unjustifiably so, it should be added. The viola is a beautiful instrument.

I know. That's why I spared him :) Shostakovich 11th symphony 3rd movement has an awesome viola solo backed up by Pizz's in the Cello and bass :)

Also, my school is doing the Bartok Concerto for Viola, along with Organ symphony and a piece by De Falla

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Lonelynight

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#48 Lonelynight
Member since 2006 • 30051 Posts
[QUOTE="Ring_of_fire"]

Oh, viola....The instrument tbat is a subject to a lot of jokes.....But.....I'll spare you :)

pianist

Unjustifiably so, it should be added. The viola is a beautiful instrument.

I'll say the violin is better but thats because I play it :P

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Ring_of_fire

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#49 Ring_of_fire
Member since 2003 • 15880 Posts
[QUOTE="pianist"][QUOTE="Ring_of_fire"]

Oh, viola....The instrument tbat is a subject to a lot of jokes.....But.....I'll spare you :)

Lonelynight

Unjustifiably so, it should be added. The viola is a beautiful instrument.

I'll say the violin is better but thats because I play it :P

i hate playing it because I suck at it. and the fingers are far closer together than I'm used to :evil:I love the violin when it's played well though. :) (I play the Bass)

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DFan17902

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#50 DFan17902
Member since 2006 • 5427 Posts
I can't read it anymore. :(