Let me just say, as a musician, I hate sight reading! I can't read music let alone guess what it's suppose to sound like the first time around. I learn everything by ear. A former choir teacher really soured me on the whole sight reading thing. She knew I couldn't do it and made me go first in front of the whole class. She was a horrible teacher. She was so bad that everybody dropped choir for the following year. How bad a teacher do you have to be to make someone stop doing something they love? It turned out for the best though. I took private lessons for 3 years even after they hired a new choir teacher. I was in the choir and taking lessons. My private teacher tried to teach me how to read music but it was a lost cause. She was so cool about it though. I'm still making music and singing but it was she could have ruined it for me completely. I tell ya, I'm so glad Al never had to deal with a teacher like I had in high school! We might not have all that fabulous music, that man to rave about 24-7 or all these wonderful friends in WOWAY!
Wow, I missed the whole sight-reading/writing music discussion. I'm going to add my 27 cents. I am a musician, and so is my husband. I have been playing the flute for 31 years. I can both read music and sight-read it. I haven't written too many songs. One I worked out a part on the fife for that my husband wrote a part on guitar for. It is not written down in the sense of writing down notes. Just written in our heads, I guess. WE have a few other songs we've written together on flute and guitar as well. While I have experience reading music, my husband does not. He can't read music. But yet he's been playing guitar for 40 years now. He can write some beautiful songs, too. Writing a song does not have to involve physically writing the notes down on paper. You can play a song, and get others to join in with you, *or just play it solo* figuring out their own parts, and it can sound really great! My husband has a band, and that's what generally happens. So a person doesn't have to know how to read music in order to write a song.
WAY: I have to think about it. I don't believe so.
TONY: But maybe.
WAY: [Laughs, followed by awkward silence]
I know Al has...there was a girl at the concert I went to who had al sign her...err....and she tattooed it....(just kinda on top, but Al must have been in an awkward position :lookround: )