I have always found the best way to memorize a difficult song, is to try to find that piece on CD or over the internet and try to play along with it. This way, you could hear if you ever have an incorrect note. This also helps because when you play, you will remember how the original sounds along with you playing and it also gives you an idea of how its supposed to go. Dont feel discouraged however by hearing the original, you should take advantage of it as much as possible and try to follow the artist's or composer's habits while playing. This not only will make you sound like the original but people will appreciate the fact that you studied the music more than just notes on a page. Hopes this helps. =)
2007-11-22 17:18:49
·
answer #1
·
answered by lil b 1
·
0⤊
0⤋
Don't try playing it up to tempo, with a CD, or in it's entirety, until you have a solid understanding of it. You can understand it best by analyizing its form and the characteristics of its rhythm and chords. Find patterns in repetition of the melody, in contrapuntal interplay (which means more than one melody being played at the same time), rhythmic patterns and form (forms such as ABA, ABAC etc.)
Also, one thing that my own piano teacher ground into me before every performance was Starting Spots. Everything I played with an orchestra, I had to be able to start fluidly at a spot about every two measures (if you skip a beat, the orchestra won't compensate for you, so you have to come back in right on your own). My teacher would assess my preparedness by having me play the piece back-to-front in these two-measure segments. This sounds tedious and dull but it helps immensely. Also, when learning the piece, practise with the metrenome until you have it absolutely solid rhythmically. Slow-to-fast work is good for learning hard passages.
After learning small sections, such as two-measure segments, start putting those together, and so on, making larger sections gradually. Don't play it all the way through until you know you can go between each measure without stopping
One you're sure you have learned the piece well, that you know each chord and rhythmic pattern, THEN you can play it with a recording.
2007-11-23 12:56:53
·
answer #2
·
answered by Pianist d'Aurellius 4
·
1⤊
0⤋
Ahh, I feel might be you don't seem to be relatively taking the time have an understanding of the harmonic and melodic constitution of a few twentieth Century song. It's tough to provide unique recommendation with out realizing what piece you are running on however listed below are a few typical suggestions: I advocate taking a while with the ranking by myself and finding out how concord works. Even if the piece is not tonal there may be mostly nonetheless a few sample to the chords getting used. Try to discover styles with those chords, and work out what chords they generally tend to visit. see if you'll improvise within the aesthetic of the piece your running on. When you'll do that you have relatively understood the composition. play via the piece very slowly simply gambling the notes which might be the concord. then construct as much as all of the more than a few voices which might be happening.
2016-09-05 12:17:15
·
answer #3
·
answered by sykes 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Ahh memorizing has always been so difficult for me! The easiest way for me was to learn only 2-3 measures at a time, then continue to play from the beginning to the point I had memorized to. Listening to the song and playing it over and over and challenging myself to start and certain parts of the song, not just to play it from the beginning.
2007-11-23 15:10:44
·
answer #4
·
answered by Jennylynn 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
I ditto "lil b"'s answer. I might just add to try and break the piece(s) down into segments, sections: slow, fast, long, short, some memorable idiosyncratic aspect of each section: it has a double sharp, or flat, how much if any silence in it as opposed to another section; what kind of an emotion, or feeling it elicits within you, etc., etc..
Hope these help.
Good luck,
Wotan
2007-11-22 17:45:23
·
answer #5
·
answered by Alberich 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
Here's how I memorized a piece:
I used a marker, scissors, and a notebook with plastic sleeves.
I ran all the pages through the copy machine.
Then on each page, I blacked out one note which I thought I could do without.
Then I put each page in a plastic sleeve in the notebook and played reading those pages.
Then I did it again, blacking out ANOTHER note on each page.
A few more rounds of this, and I dared to black out more than one note at a time.
I repeated the pattern until I could cut away entire portions with scissors.
I repeated this until I could eliminate all the pages.
2007-11-23 22:27:59
·
answer #6
·
answered by suhwahaksaeng 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
Play the piece many times. I played my piano exam pieces every day. So, after the exam ( a year or more), I can still remember the piece and manage to play it without any mistakes.Practice makes perfect:)
2007-11-22 17:42:40
·
answer #7
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋