Music for Sightsinging (6th Edition)

Music for Sightsinging (6th Edition)

Music for Sightsinging (6th Edition)

more information about Music for Sightsinging (6th Edition)

Editorial Reviews
Book Description
Music for Sight Singing provides music examples for practice in accomplishing the sight singing goals described on the first page of the text. The principal objective of the study is to acquire the ability to sing a given melody at first sight. Once sung, that melody no longer qualifies to satisfy its purpose, though repetition is valuable in reviewing errors. Thus, a large number of melodies (nearly 1,200 in this volume) is desirable to provide enough practice material to accomplish the "first sight" requirement. So that the sight singing materials will provide a musical satisfaction greater than that from routine exercises, the melodies in this text are carefully chosen from the literature of composed music and a wide range of the world's folk music. Music examples written, especially for pedagogical purposes are kept to a minimum. All materials are graded so that the student is presented with just one musical problem, rhythmic or melodic, at a time. In a given melody, only those musical elements presented in its chapter or in previous chapters will be found. To facilitate the presentation of either element pitch or rhythm the opening examples of each chapter will make use only of the simplest materials of the other element. Prerequisite to the study of sight singing is a working knowledge of the basic aspects of music theory, these often taught from materials with titles such as "Introduction," "Rudiments," or "Fundamentals."1 In the area of pitch, these are especially important: (1) the ability to spell, write, and sing all major and minor scales; (2) the ability to write all major and minor key signatures; and (3) the ability to recognize the key from a given key signature. In the area of rhythm, a knowledge of note values and the interpretation of time (meter) signatures is necessary. Much of this information will be reviewed as the need occurs throughout the text. However, bringing to the opening studies a comprehensive and usable knowledge of these basic materials will guarantee more immediate accomplishment of sight-reading goals. The text as a whole may be considered as consisting of four parts: Chapters 1-9, diatonic melodies with rhythmic patterns limited to beat-note values and their simplest divisions (simple time, two per beat; compound time, three per beat). Chapters 10-12, rhythmic studies and diatonic melodies that include subdivisions of the beat value. Chapters 13-19, chromaticism, modulation, and more advanced rhythmic problems. Chapters 20-21, the medieval modes and twentieth-century melodic lines. The principal features of previous editions remain unchanged. Improvement in this sixth edition include (1) some fifty new melodies, many in the areas of chromaticism, while considerably fewer have been deleted; (2) additional explanatory material for such subjects as "hemiola," and "Neapolitan sixth chords"; and (3) in many chapters, melodies relocated to present smoother progression from easy to difficult within the chapter. align="right"> Robert W. Ottman

From the Back Cover

The study of sight singing is one of the most important means of developing the ability to recognize ("to hear") mentally the sound of music notation on the printed page without the necessity of recourse to a musical instrument. For the professional musician, performer, or teacher, this skill is a necessity, while for others, achievement will greatly amplify the pleasures of musical activity in performance and listening.

To achieve success in sight singing, students must have large numbers of melodies available for practice. Once a melody has been sung, repetition is no longer "singing at first sight," although reviewing for study purposes is highly recommended. To this end, this volume includes 1,199 examples. Most of these are chosen from worldwide folk sources and a wide variety of composed music, ranging from melodies simpler than Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star to excerpts from Bartok string quartets. The remaining examples, written by the author, provide practice for rhythm alone, and for singing melodies composed only of adjacent scale steps, valuable for initial study but rarely found in music literature.

Each chapter presents only one new problem, either in rhythm or in melody, allowing students to concentrate on the newly introduced feature. Otherwise, no chapter will include any material not already presented in earlier chapters. For the dedicated student, this careful selection and grading of melodies guarantees steady and rewarding progress to a successful accomplishment of sight singing skills. Some of the changes in the new edition include:



Music for Sightsinging (6th Edition)

Music for Sightsinging (6th Edition),Robert W. Ottman,Prentice Hall,0131896628,General,Melody,Music,Vocal Music,Music / General

Fun Book:

  1. Music in Latin American Culture : Regional Traditions
  2. Music in the Renaissance (2nd Edition)
  3. Music Theory for Guitarists
  4. Musical Form and Analysis
  5. Paul Simon - The Very Best : A Collection of His Greatest Hits (Paul Simon/Simon & Garfunkel)
  6. Piano Lessons from Masters of the Grand Style : From the Golden Age of Etude Magazine (1913-1940)
  7. Piano Tuning : A Simple and Accurate Method for Amateurs
  8. Rhythm & Light
  9. Rivers' Edge : The Weezer Story
  10. Russia Gets the Blues: Music, Culture, and Community in Unsettled Times (Culture and Society After Socialism)

Fun Book

Fun Book

Recommended Books

  1. Shomei Tomatsu
  2. Stoopnagle's Tale Is Twisted: Spoonerisms Run Amok
  3. Bel Canto : A Theoretical and Practical Vocal Method
  4. Coaching : Evoking Excellence in Others
  5. Cases and Materials on Admirality
  6. Behavioral Neurobiology: The Cellular Organization of Natural Behavior
  7. Creationism's Trojan Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design
  8. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
  9. Children of the Night
  10. Appetite
  11. Band Saw Handbook
  12. Amazing Babies: Essential Movement for Your Baby in the First Year
  13. A New Order of Things : Property, Power, and the Transformation of the Creek Indians, 1733-1816
  14. BELAU
  15. Baedeker's Hungary