Read Music FAST!
What you’ll learn
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See a note on a score and play it on the piano straight away
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Understand how sight reading works
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Name any note on the piano instantly
“I just learned in 2.5 hours what I have been shying away from for 15 years.” – Aleister
“Don’t even think about any other course, this is the one. I would gladly give more stars if available.” – Adam Robson
“WOW! The instructor’s method and exercises meant I was nailing five octaves of note reading in just a day! … Excellent production quality, excellent graphics, clear explanation. … I’d give it ten stars if I could.” – Mark S A Smith
“After the course, I can assure you that you will not be seeing a music sheet the same way again.” – Kathleen Rosario
“I really can’t say enough good things about this class.” – Jim Thomason
“Incredible.” – Dadang Setiawan
“… can’t believe how easy that was!“ – Bryan
“He makes it stupid easy” – Alex Kilker
“His technique works!“ – Jason Cooksey
“10/10 would recommend to a friend.” – Sheila Vega
“Helpful even for non beginners” – Nikola
Sight reading is one of the hardest aspects of learning to play the piano, and it’s universally badly taught. This course uses a unique method to teach you how to read any note on the piano keyboard quickly and easily, so that you can then tackle any piano course with confidence. It will also help if you’ve already started learning piano but are struggling to read the notes (e.g in the bass clef).
5 problems with the traditional method
Traditionally, students have been taught mnemonics to remember what note falls on every single line and space of the 2 clefs, e.g. “Every Good Boys Deserves Favour” for the lines of the treble clef (E, G, B, D, F). This has several problems:
- It’s a lot to remember. You have to memorise 4 phrases (“Every Good Boy Deserves Favour”, “F-A-C-E”, “Good Boys Deserve Favour Always”, and “All Cows Eat Grass”), and then remember when to apply them, which doesn’t follow any logical pattern.
- It’s slow, because you have to recite a phrase every time you want to play a note.
- It’s language-based rather than visual, and yet sight reading is a visual skill! It makes you translate every note on the page into a note name and then translate that note name into a note on the piano, but there are no note names on the page and no note names on the piano so you should just be able to see a note and then play it.
- It doesn’t tell you which note to play, it just tells you its note name. For example, “Good Boys Deserve Favour Always” might tell you that the note you’re looking at is an F, but it doesn’t tell you which F it is, and there are 8 on the piano!
- It doesn’t even teach you all of the notes you’re likely to play. What about Middle C, or D, or B, which are all in between the clefs? What if you go above the top of the treble clef, or below the bottom of the bass clef (both of which are really common)? The mnemonics won’t help you.
5 reasons why my method is better
- There’s less to remember. You’ll just learn where the signs for the treble and bass clef came from, and how that helps you recognise the notes.
- It’s faster. By the end of the course you’ll be able to see a note and just play it, without reciting anything.
- It’s visual. I use pictures and colour-coding to help you recognise notes.
- It’s specific. My method not only tells you that you should be playing, e.g., and F, it also tells you which F to play. However, most of the time you won’t even be conscious of the name of the note you’re playing, you’ll just play it.
- It covers 211% more notes. It teaches you how to read 32 white notes quickly and easily, whereas the traditional method only teaches you how to read 18 slowly. Plus I’ll also teach you and test you on the black notes, which comprise another 24 notes, a total of 211% more (14 white + 24 black notes).
This course will not only save you a ton of time, it’ll also make you feel better about an area of music that a lot of people feel that they’re “bad” at because they’ve been badly taught. (That’s not the teachers’ fault, it’s just that no-one’s come up with a really good method of teaching sight reading before.) And if you’re not convinced you can always take advantage of Udemy’s 30-day no-questions-asked money back guarantee.
So how does it work?
I’ll teach you 9 “reference” notes in a visual and intuitive way, using HD videos with an overhead shot of my piano and lots of graphics. After each video I’ll then test you on what you’ve just learned using interactive tests specially made for this course, which intelligently keep track of which notes you’re finding difficult so that they can test you on those more. (I’ve also thrown in a mini-course on the best way to learn the note names, in case you’re a complete beginner and don’t know them yet!)
All of these techniques have been developed over the course of 10 years of teaching, and have been tried and tested them on hundreds of students. One of them said that my sight reading method was “so easy a monkey could learn it”. I teach freelance and charge one lesson at a time, so my teaching methods have to be good otherwise I wouldn’t be able to make a living teaching (and I do make a living teaching).
Whenever students have asked to recommend any good beginner resources, whether online or in book form, I’ve always been stuck because I’ve never found anything really good, despite looking, so I’m happy to finally be putting this online. Students have been pestering me for years to publish my teaching methods but this is the first time I’ve done so. If it proves popular I’ll add more courses!
What this course isn’t
This is a note-reading course rather than a complete sight reading course – it’s designed to kickstart your sight reading rather than teach you how to sight read complete pieces of music. So, for that reason:
- it doesn’t teach you about rhythm,
- it doesn’t teach you about key signatures, and
- it doesn’t get you to sight read any complete pieces of music.
Each of those things would require entire courses by themselves, which maybe I’ll add if there’s enough demand!
This course just does one thing and it does it really well: it teaches you how to read individual notes on the piano keyboard. However, no matter what piano course you follow, whether it’s online, or from a book, or with a teacher, this course will help you with your sight reading.
One other thing: this course has been designed for and tested on people who are learning the piano or keyboard, not other instruments. It’ll probably help if you’re learning a non-keyboard instrument, just bear in mind that it wasn’t made for you! If you are learning another instrument you can always try the course out and get a refund if it doesn’t help.
In conclusion
I really think my method is the best way to learn how to read the notes on the piano keyboard, and I’d love to see this become the new standard way of teaching it, so if you do try my course and find it useful please spread the word! If you don’t like you can always get a no-questions-asked full refund within 30 days.
Best of luck on your musical journey!
Benedict
Who this course is for:
- This course is designed for complete beginners who’d like an overview of how sight reading works at the piano and who’d like to learn how to read any note on a piano score.
- It will also help piano students who can already sight read but who hesitate over certain notes, e.g. in the bass clef.
- This course is NOT for piano students who can already read the notes on a piano score and would like to improve their ability to read rhythm, key signatures, or complete pieces of music. It’s just for beginners who’d like to learn how to read individual notes really quickly.
12 reviews for Read Music FAST!
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Original price was: $19.99.$15.99Current price is: $15.99.
Daniel Mejia –
This has been of great help as a foundation on learning how to read music.
Christian Boehme –
This course was inspiring, at last a system that provide the tools to make music notation stick. I’ve been struggling for years. The reference note system and the testing interface is a fantastic combination. I will continue to go back to this course to build my speed and confidence. This is the best method I’ve encountered thus far. Struggling with the confidence around reading music tends suck the fun out of music. I’m looking forward to Part Two well done Benedict.
Pauline Borcena –
AMAZING! I love piano. I’ve been playing since kid, but I only know letters and forgotten how to read a proper musical sheet. It helps me to stay proactive & healthy after longweek of work. Music calms mind.
Kai Lerner –
Ich habe ehrlich gesagt ausgefeiltere Übungen erwartet, nicht nur ein “Zufalls-System” für das Noten-Lernen. Dennoch war der Kurs okay für das Geld – als Grundstock ist er sicherlich gut! Vor allem wenn du noch gar keine Erfahrung hast. Falls du schon etwas hast, ist eine moderne Musik-Lern-App vorzuziehen.
Parimal Rane –
Excellent course with tips and exercises. I have been trying to memorise the notes since month and never thought it would be so easier to do it after this course.
Dean Hussey –
This is actually super handy. I’ve never really learned how to read traditional music (I write music elecronically, and am generally more used to a piano roll and a step sequencer), but I felt it was time to learn since I want to pursue music professionally. The course is doing a great job of explaining everything in a very easily understood way so far.
Jagan Parthiban –
Reference Note and Non-reference Note concept provided me clarity. The tests are amazing. I connect my casio Keyboard to the computer and take the test.
Satheesh Kumar Sitsabesan –
This is an excellent course. I went through the course very quickly. If you take you time with the exercises, and repeat them several times, you are well on your way to master sight reading.
A Brown –
Fantastic course. Five star. Really easy to learn to read the notes. Huge thank you. Only issue I had was that sometimes my fingers touch the wrong notes in the tests as they are too big for the mobile keyboard and expanding the size of the keyboard meant I could no longer see what note I was meant to play on the music. This is not course related, but rather my phone and fingers related.
Alfred Arreguin –
Someone spent the time to work out system that realy helps one remember all they keys on staff and keyboard-piano. I wonder if those were the exact intentions of their invention. Special knowledge then passed on to only a few.
Nuno Gonçalves –
Musician for 20 years (guitar and bass), never got into notation reading, and now I’ve just up and learned it on piano in less than 1h. CRAZY!!!
Dimitry –
Learning piano for less than a month and this set of tutorials was really really helpful to setting the correct motion vector?