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Thanks so much everyone for all the recommendations! There's a ton of material here for me to go through and I'm bookmarking it all!
Stub You don't have to be able to look at a note and say, ah, D#. You do need to be able to look at that note and have your finger go to the correct spot on the keyboard. Also, whenever possible, read intervals rather than individual notes. This applies to block chords and broken chords.
THANK YOU! This is the one thing I've been trying out this week and it's lifted a load off of me.
I just STOPPED trying to figure out all the note names before finding my place on the keyboard and it has helped tremendously. This is something I should have known already but for whatever reason I regressed back to trying to figure out the note names. The truth is the note names don't matter here.
It's like now I have more CPU available to make it work. While I'm not yet a sight reading machine, it's suddenly a more intuitive process.
twocats It sounds like you really dislike reading music and unfortunately the reality is that the more you do it, the easier it will get!
It's not that I dislike it. I've been trying to stick to it out of principle, because that's what everyone recommends, including my teacher. Lately I have been finding it counter-productive in practice because it has made my progress crawl to a halt.
Nightowl I struggle with sight reading too, but whenever I've seen you play you look very relaxed and confident, so I would never have guessed that you struggle much with any aspect of playing piano.
Thanks a lot for that boost of confidence!
There's some awesome material in this thread that I'm planning to study and follow up on more closely. Thanks all!
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