rojo
(Ret)
Interesting article. What do you all think?
http://music.guardian.co.uk/classical/story/0,,2060997,00.html
http://music.guardian.co.uk/classical/story/0,,2060997,00.html
Interesting article. What do you all think?
http://music.guardian.co.uk/classical/story/0,,2060997,00.html
Rojo, do you have any suggestions as to how to go about memorizing a piece and getting it to stick?
Most of my performance is in groups: choirs, pit orchestras, etc., where sight reading is much more important than memorization. I suppose I conduct pretty much from memory, but I usually have the score nearby, just to be safe. (Though I have had a few embarrassing lapses, which my singers always found hilarious).
When it comes to memorization, I just don't know where to begin. I've tried a bit since I began learning piano, but I just can't get the notes to stick in my head. My current tactic is to play from the score and gradually try to look away more and more. Problem is I tend to lose my place in the score and then get really muddles. I've also tried playing a few bars over and over with the score, then trying once with my eyes closed. That doesn't really work either--no matter how many times I repeat it, I can't seem to remember where my fingers go. When I do manage to memorize a piece (and I've only managed on melody instruments) it only sticks in my head for a few weeks at most. Any ideas?
. . . I hear you about getting lost when you try to look back at the score. Completely normal. But I think the looking away more and more tactic is good. Forget the playing with eyes closed though, I think; your eyes need to see the patterns of the music on the keys.
Interesting. I`ll have to try it then. Does it work for you even when there are big leaps and such?I often try the 'eyes closed' method, which for me seems to work out better than looking at my hands - when I do that, I get totally confused ... !
Really? What kind of system does a visually impaired person use to read/make posts?We had a sightless member join this forum a day or so ago - made me start to wonder how a sight impaired person learns new pieces, besides using braille music?
Well, a little peek now and then doesn't hurt on such things as leaps and huge spans :grin:Interesting. I`ll have to try it then. Does it work for you even when there are big leaps and such?
I didn't mean to discredit the suggestion by any means - I can certainly see lots of validity in using visual cues. Sometimes I will focus on the pipework of the organ visualizing each pipe as it emits sound and pitch. [/quote]I mention the looking at the keys suggestion because it`s another visual cue system (besides visualizing the notes on the score) that may be of use. The notes one plays make patterns on the keyboard which may be helpful to memorization for some people, (probably lots.)
There is something called "talking software" that the blind can use with a PC. For 'typing' there is voice recognition software ... I know my version of MS Word has it - but I can type faster than I can say the wordsReally? What kind of system does a visually impaired person use to read/make posts?
Thanks for your advice. I'll try it out tonight. Andrew, seems like you're talking more about learning to improvise than memorizing, but that's actually another thing I'd love to learn.
Thanks again.