• anon6789@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        When you learned to read as a little kid, it took you years to learn enough words to read, and you didn’t start with Shakespeare or Tolstoy, you worked up from See Spot Run.

        Reading music is the same. You learn the first, start to recognize chords and patterns and context clues, and you learn to read more and more complicated things until you don’t see the individual pieces, but the actual song like you don’t see individual letters when you read a book now.

        I’m 3 years in with a teacher, and I’m getting better every week. It often doesn’t feel like it, because my pieces increase in difficulty as I’m progressing. It’s syncing my hands to what I’m reading that I’m working on at this point. Once my reading progresses to where I can recognize chords and chord progressions quick enough, that’s going to be the next plateau.

        Just stick with it, and you can read music anywhere, not just at your instrument. Get in practice where you can. You’ll always be that much better than the day before!

      • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        From the sounds of it, most of us never learned how to read music like that, so I guess you’re in good company!

        • AskewLord@piefed.social
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          1 day ago

          why would you ever learn to do it unless you’re working professionally in classical music in some capacity?

            • AskewLord@piefed.social
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              1 day ago

              that takes 5-10 years of practice, several hours per week.

              every amateur musician i know practices like 10 hours a week, and the semi-pros it’s more like 20