Preview Strategy
Learn a short pre-reading routine for key, range, rhythm, and difficult shapes.
Scan before playing
Check the clef, key signature, time signature, range, and largest leaps. This takes a few seconds and prevents most avoidable mistakes.
Choose a tempo
Pick a tempo that lets you read the hardest spot. Sight-reading fails when the tempo is chosen for the easiest measure.
Five-second score scan
Before playing, scan clef, key, meter, range, and the hardest rhythm. This short routine makes the first pass feel prepared instead of reactive.
Tempo from the hardest spot
Choose a tempo based on the measure most likely to fail. A tempo that only fits the easy opening is not a sight-reading tempo.
Analysis preview
A complete preview asks: What key? What meter? What form? What texture? Which rhythm or leap is hardest? Answer those before the first note.
Form map
Even a short sight-reading example has structure. Mark repeated motives, contrasting phrases, and return points so the music is read in blocks.
Harmonic roadmap
Preview the bass roots and cadence points before the first pass. A harmonic roadmap tells you where the phrase is going even if some inner notes are unfamiliar.
Analysis marks
Use small marks: key, roman numerals, cadence type, sequence bracket, and non-chord tone labels. Mark only what helps the next performance.
Style preview
A sight-reading preview should include style: straight or swing, simple or compound meter, tonal or modal, chord-symbol-based or fully notated.
Tempo by style
Tempo is not just speed. A march, waltz, shuffle, ballad, and film ostinato can use similar note values but feel completely different.
Guided walkthrough
A useful preview identifies the few details that will matter while playing.
- 1Check clef, key, and time signature.
- 2Find the range and largest leap.
- 3Choose a tempo based on the hardest spot.
Try it on the keyboard
Preview the exercise, then play it once without changing tempo.
- 1Point to the hardest measure.
- 2Set a slow tempo.
- 3Play from start to finish.
Common mistake
Choosing tempo from the easiest measure makes the hard measure fail.
Check yourself
Can you explain why your chosen tempo fits the hardest spot?
Theory transfer
Connect analysis preview and form map to the notation before playing so the theory idea becomes a reading decision, not only a definition.
- 1Name the theory idea in one short sentence.
- 2Point to the note, rhythm, interval, chord, or phrase shape that shows it.
- 3Play the example once for accuracy.
- 4Play it again while listening for the theory idea.
Analyze and compose
Use harmonic roadmap and analysis marks to explain what the music is doing, then make one small musical choice of your own.
- 1Name the key or temporary key area.
- 2Label the chord, cadence, non-chord tone, or phrase function.
- 3Play the example while saying the labels quietly.
- 4Compose a one-measure answer or variation using the same idea.
Style lab
Experiment with style preview and tempo by style so the same notes can feel different by rhythm, scale choice, groove, and touch.
- 1Name the style or scale color before playing.
- 2Clap or count the rhythm feel without pitches.
- 3Play the notation slowly with the intended feel.
- 4Change one element: rhythm, accompaniment, articulation, or scale color.
Short applied practice
Preview key, meter, range, rhythm, and largest leap before playing the first note.
- 1Preview the clef, key, rhythm, and main pattern before playing.
- 2Play once slowly while naming the lesson concept out loud.
- 3Repeat only the two notes or beats that caused hesitation.
- 4Play the full example again without changing tempo.
覚えておくこと
The preview is part of practice. Do it before every new excerpt.