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> Quick study - no writing?
vee
post Jun 14 2012, 09:17 AM
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QUOTE(RoseRodent @ Jun 11 2012, 03:56 PM) *

They are two different skills though. Genuine sight reading is (roughly speaking!) about producing what you can see and trying to keep up with the orchestra while you do so and ideally putting in the right notes and dynamics and articulation as you go past, quick study is how musically can you perform this in 5 minutes.


It seems to me that the QS is neither a test of sight reading abilities, nor of performance under constraints.

- If they are testing sight reading, then 5 minutes is too much time. They should allow ONE minute, to look at the music - not allow play through of any music, nor marking of the score in any form. In this case, the skill being tested is the ability to accurately perform a piece of music on the go, never having seen the score before

- If you get 5 minutes prep for QS, AND you also get to play through the score, then its no longer sight reading- so what is it that they are really testing? They may as well allow 10 minutes, allow you to mark the score, add your own dynamics , play through pieces of it and then test how well you are able to interpret a piece of music that you have never seen before, given a short time frame.
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jessy
post Jun 14 2012, 10:27 AM
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QUOTE(erard @ Jun 12 2012, 09:14 PM) *

In orchestral sightreading I have been found counting my 23 bars rest with pencil in hand while scribbling pedals in for the next entry but one...



23 bars rest is a luxury violins often do not have! Please don't think I'm implying harpists have it easy though. far from it.

I had to do some orchestral sightreading last week...without a pencil. 16 pages with hardly a bar's rest of a piece I didn't know. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/ph34r.gif)

As far as I'm aware, you'd never expect to mark any kind of sight-reading/quick study for exam or audition purposes.
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RoseRodent
post Jun 14 2012, 11:15 AM
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QUOTE(jessy @ Jun 14 2012, 11:27 AM) *


23 bars rest is a luxury violins often do not have!


Try the viola section! (IMG:style_emoticons/default/laugh.gif) When the violins are resting and cellos are playing, we play with the cellos. When cellos are resting and the violins are playing, we play along with the violins. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/rolleyes.gif)
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ansatz496
post Jun 14 2012, 02:24 PM
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QUOTE(vee @ Jun 14 2012, 05:17 AM) *

QUOTE(RoseRodent @ Jun 11 2012, 03:56 PM) *

They are two different skills though. Genuine sight reading is (roughly speaking!) about producing what you can see and trying to keep up with the orchestra while you do so and ideally putting in the right notes and dynamics and articulation as you go past, quick study is how musically can you perform this in 5 minutes.


It seems to me that the QS is neither a test of sight reading abilities, nor of performance under constraints.

- If they are testing sight reading, then 5 minutes is too much time. They should allow ONE minute, to look at the music - not allow play through of any music, nor marking of the score in any form. In this case, the skill being tested is the ability to accurately perform a piece of music on the go, never having seen the score before

- If you get 5 minutes prep for QS, AND you also get to play through the score, then its no longer sight reading- so what is it that they are really testing? They may as well allow 10 minutes, allow you to mark the score, add your own dynamics , play through pieces of it and then test how well you are able to interpret a piece of music that you have never seen before, given a short time frame.


5 minutes may seem like an awkward amount of time, but I at least have encountered it in "real life" many times (more often than 1 min or 10 min situations) (IMG:style_emoticons/default/ph34r.gif)
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liseypeasy
post Jun 14 2012, 09:57 PM
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Surely the quick study is designed to see what musical impression you can give of a page(?) of music that's of a certain technical standard, in a short time frame? I'd have thought by dip level you should be pretty au fait with notes and (ahem) rhythms, key etc so it's just seeing how you identify and tackle the tricky parts in that time, and manage to make a performance of it rather than just a technical reading.

Maybe, if you're used to writing squiggles on a page that help direct your interpretation (I kind of do that, but it's usually to help focus), it's a good idea to practise not writing them down - see if you can perform the music expressively, whatever your instrument's particlar peculiarities are? Even though you have a preferred way of doing something, you can still teach yourself another way, and you would feel better prepared on the day. Maybe get some grade 6-ish pieces that you don't already know and try performing them without your safety net of writing on them? That will give an idea of how it feels.

I'd have thought post grade 8 you can play with some expression fairly instinctively?
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RoseRodent
post Jun 15 2012, 12:11 PM
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The page notes I normally make are fingering choices. I'm not sure what your instrument is so maybe this is stuff you know, maybe not, but for many instruments there are a variety of ways of tackling the same notes. On something like a flute, unless you are using trill fingering then when you see a top C on a page you finger top C, you don't have (well, don't tend to use in everyday sight-reading) a variety of different options. That leaves more freedom to move directly to the musical elements.

A stringed instrument, with a few exceptions, can play each note with any finger and can be on a choice of strings. If I see on the music that I will have to be in 1/2 position here then I need to work out how is the most logical way of progressing into that position so there is not a speedbump while I enter the position more awkwardly. I can sight-read my position changes, but it leaves much more fluency for a difficult passage if I try the different options, but then having tried 4 different ways of shifting in different places I want to cement which one I chose, otherwise I risk going for the one which is my first instinct rather than the one which was musically the best. I like to quickly get the technical out of the way so I can move on to the musical.

I'm doing more studies in positions I don't like very much and listening to more modern music to help with my quick study. I'm probably worrying over nothing, most people tell me I will be fine (based on actually listening to me, not just being reassuring) but then the AB magazine arrived this week with an article on how hard the quick study is and I went back to wanting to blow my brains out. Still considering Trinity too, not to avoid the QS but because the AB diploma dates are a nightmare for me. It's the first time in 9 years that I've been free on ANY of the diploma dates!
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ryb1974
post Jun 17 2012, 10:18 PM
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I specifically asked whether I could mark the QS, and was told that I couldn't. It stands to reason - you're not given an individual part, rather the QS that you are given is in a book, which is clearly intended for reuse. There are other pieces on adjacent pages, so it wouldn't be right for a candidate to be faced with someone else's scribbles, say, on the left hand page, when you're playing the piece on the right hand page. The pages need to be kept nice and clean.

One other thing - the examiners will not tell you instantly if you've failed the QS to give you the opportunity to leave early. They'll stay tight-lipped and you'll have to take the full exam anyway. Which is a good thing, in my opinion.
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vee
post Jun 18 2012, 04:56 AM
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QUOTE(liseypeasy @ Jun 14 2012, 09:57 PM) *

I'd have thought by dip level you should be pretty au fait with notes and (ahem) rhythms, key etc so it's just seeing how you identify and tackle the tricky parts in that time, and manage to make a performance of it rather than just a technical reading.

I'd have thought post grade 8 you can play with some expression fairly instinctively?


I think it all depends on a person's comfort level. For instance, I deal with flats better than sharps- anythiing over four sharps gives me the jitters (IMG:style_emoticons/default/sad.gif)

Has anyone ever tried to unravel Ravel's Ondine from Gaspard de la nuit? With SEVEN sharps (IMG:style_emoticons/default/ohmy.gif) and time signature changes every other bar, imagine getting something similar for your QS (IMG:style_emoticons/default/blink.gif) It would be a good idea to just pack up and go home and hope that next time around you get a piece in C major? (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif) Well...there's always somethiing called hope.
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