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Reading Expert 4(2020)
Reading Expert 4(2020)
Reading Expert 4(2020)
UNIT 12 - READING 1 Musical Geniuses
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UNIT 12 - READING 1 Musical Geniuses
In music, sight-reading is the act of playing a piece of music that one has never seen or heard before simply by reading sheet music. While most musicians struggle to do this with fluency, legends exist about the amazing sight-reading abilities of famous composers of the past. These geniuses could sight-read a piece as if they had been playing it for years. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was one such genius. Without any practice or rehearsal, he could look at a sheet of music and play it perfectly on the piano, down to the very last note. This skill came in handy for him when he was writing his own music, as he always knew how each note of a piece would sound before he had even written it down or tried playing it. Ludwig van Beethoven had a similar ability and is famous for once having played an entire concerto in a new key due to an out-of-tune piano. This is the same as asking an actor, five minutes before a show, to deliver his lines in Swedish instead of English. Like Mozart, Beethoven could mentally "hear" notes without playing them, which became important later in his life when he continued writing music despite going completely deaf. However, most scholars agree that Franz Liszt was likely the most talented sight-reader ever. There is a story about a student composer who brought Liszt a piano concerto he had just written. The music was scrawled messily across several pages, with frequent scratch-outs and substitutions. But Liszt took the manuscript from him, glanced at it for a second, and proceeded to play the entire thing — including the orchestra parts-without missing a note! His skill was so great that he is said to have given a perfect performance of every known piece of music in history.
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1 In music, sight-reading is the act of playing a piece of music that one has never seen or heard before simply by reading sheet music. 2 While most musicians struggle to do this with fluency, legends exist about the amazing sight-reading abilities of famous composers of the past. 3 These geniuses could sight-read a piece as if they had been playing it for years. 4 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was one such genius. 5 Without any practice or rehearsal, he could look at a sheet of music and play it perfectly on the piano, down to the very last note. 6 This skill came in handy for him when he was writing his own music, as he always knew how each note of a piece would sound before he had even written it down or tried playing it. 7 Ludwig van Beethoven had a similar ability and is famous for once having played an entire concerto in a new key due to an out-of-tune piano. 8 This is the same as asking an actor, five minutes before a show, to deliver his lines in Swedish instead of English. 9 Like Mozart, Beethoven could mentally "hear" notes without playing them, which became important later in his life when he continued writing music despite going completely deaf. 10 However, most scholars agree that Franz Liszt was likely the most talented sight-reader ever. 11 There is a story about a student composer who brought Liszt a piano concerto he had just written. 12 The music was scrawled messily across several pages, with frequent scratch-outs and substitutions. 13 But Liszt took the manuscript from him, glanced at it for a second, and proceeded to play the entire thing — including the orchestra parts-without missing a note! 14 His skill was so great that he is said to have given a perfect performance of every known piece of music in history.