Hi everyone,
I have recently started to teach myself the piano, using mainly online resources and my own musical instincts. While the step-by-step learning process of a piece is easier nowadays, with MIDI files and digital pianos displaying sheet music on LCD screens, it is the process by which you "encode" the piece in your mind for later retrieval that I find more difficult to master - in the sense that I don't know what a good, optimal "encoding strategy" would be that leads to much faster retrieval from memory, and probably allows one to memorise many more pieces than with a random, suboptimal strategy (or no strategy whatsoever).
Even though I normally think about the structure of the music I'm playing (e.g. type of chords), I find that I tend most often to memorise music "superficially", i.e. relying mostly on visuals, so I find I am effectively remembering a series of pictures of where my fingers are located on the keyboard at succesive points in time. This seems to work fine so far for short(ish) pieces (e.g. first section of Fuer Elise and Chopin's Prelude Op. 28 No. 4), but as the pieces get longer (and more pieces start to accumulate), I think that having a consistent, efficient "strategy" is needed to guide one's learning style. For example I am now working on Bach's Prelude No. 1 in C Major (WTC Book 1), and I find I'm remembering some of the arpeggios using the visual strategy, and others by imagining how they should sound, and then "recreating" the hand position that leads to those intervals. Should one of these be favoured over the other, or perhaps none of these is actually optimal in the long run?
I know that, as I progress, I will have to (sight) read fast enough, which will replace the need to memorise everything, but right now I am mostly concerned with how to effectively memorise pieces that I will probably be playing often.
Of course, analytically noticing any kind of pattern in the music (such as repetitions, chord type) effectively reduces the amount of information you have to process and store, and so your playing fluency improves a lot, and you are able to progress much faster than if you are just learning without noticing any patterns/particularities of the piece. To give an obvious example, you'll much faster take an Am chord if you know that all it has all white keys than if you apply the "general formula" of a minor scale and start on the note A, then work 3 semitones up, then 4 semitones up, then 5 semitones up. So, I guess, remembering chunks of pre-processed information like that avoids having to recreate everything from scratch and "reinvent the wheel" when you play, which would obviously slow you down.
I know probably most people don't ask themselves that many questions when learning/playing the piano, but I think that, at the start of the journey, it's good to be a bit analytical and realise a few things about how our minds most efficiently encode this type of information in such a way that its retrieval, when you need it, will be fast and accurate.
I would be very grateful if more experienced pianists could share their views on how they find it is most efficient to learn and memorise piano pieces - many thanks in advance!
PS: I've also posted this question on PianoWorld.com