thanks bernhard....
However, how important is memorisation?? My teacher never ask me to remember a piece..... I wonder is he being linient on me or not....
plz help
Memorising is not a matter of life and death. Of course a performing pianist is expected to play from memory (but not everyone follows this injunction – which apparently was started by Clara Schumann, and at the time everyone criticised her for using “cheap circus tricks”- I have seen Andras Schiff play with score, and Richter in his old age also played with the score). Other musicians always play with the score. However, memorising has many advantages, including not having to carry around your scores with you.
In my opinion, what most people call memorising is not memorising at all. They usually mean
hand memory, while I mean truly knowing a piece back to front (what key it is in, the time signature, the chord progressions, the motifs, how it is structured, etc.). Memorising also means aural memory (that is, being able to hear the piece in your mind form beginning to end in real time without missing any note).
Read more about memory and how to go about it here:
https://pianoforum.net/smf/index.php/topic,2083.msg17227.html#msg17227(the basic theory of memory)
https://pianoforum.net/smf/index.php/topic,3858.msg34936.html#msg34936(the basics – includes the history of the Art of memory)
https://www.pianoforum.net/smf/index.php/topic,7399.msg74758.html#msg74758(the details of the process using “dozen a day” as an example)
https://pianoforum.net/smf/index.php/topic,4321.msg40373.html#msg40373(why do you teach? – policies and teaching methods –pragmatical theory of memory)
As for what your teacher does, it is a complex (but not complicated) act that can be learned (but to do so you must spend time training yourself to master each of the individual components of this complex task).
1. He
listensto your playing. (you must practise this skill: not just to hear, but to listen)
2. He them memorises the tune, harmonies, etc. and makes a number of associations as he goes along (again you must train yourself on these skills: memorising a tune will be easier than memorising harmonies).
3. All along he will draw on his knowledge and experience of music theory (again something you have to know back to front).
4. He then sits at the piano and as he recalls what he has just heard (another skill to practise in isolation)…
5. … He plays what he hears in his mind by ear (yet another complex skill: to play by ear)
6. And depending on his inner strategy for memorising (there are several – aome better then others), he may even “write” the music you are playing in an imaginary score, and then use a photographic memory to “read” this mental score (this sort of skill must be learned by doing things like dictation, for instance).
This of course is just the general outline. The actual process may differ and have many more details.
Best wishes,
Bernhard.