Came across this forum and decided to register

by not trying to memorize. the best way i know: simply practice as you usually do - by the time you have solved all your problems with that work, the work will already be memorized and all this without any special effort from you!
best luck
for me i don't work like that. When i first touch a piece, i listen to it (either by playing through it, and of course if there's a recording available that's good too. The only problem with this is that you might get directly influenced by the recording which might so work against you eventually). Once i'm quite familiar with how the piece sounds, I start to WORK on the memory (i prefer playing everything from memory).
My memory is roughly 50% aural memory, 40% physical memory, 10% visual memory.
How this works:
- Look at a section of the piece. Play that section a few times to get an aural memory.
- Once you know how it sounds, close the book (if you're not determined enough) and then play it. If you hit a wrong note, stop, restart from the beginning. Repeat till you have a near firm grasp of the section (depending on difficulty: one bar, or one phrase... rarely more) this way you get your physical memory.
- Look at the next section. Repeat previous steps. (at this point if there're any sequences or patterns its good to put them to good use. also MAKE SURE that your physical memory doesn't get in your way if you have to play something like a min2nd transposition - an exception where this method tends to cause problems -.Look at where to place your fingers and hands - visual memory - )
- Try to join both sections.
- Keep going till you've finished a large enough section.
- Start a new section.
At the start of each practice session, play through what you know (or whenever you have time to sit at a piano, just leisurely). Use your aural to tell you when you make a mistake. You don't have to repeat the whole thing, unless you're a masochist, but make a mental note not to make the same mistake again. If that fails, isolate that passage and work on it, then paste it back into the section you're working on. Note that this whole time, you do not need to even open the book, unless you're not confident with your aural memory, then have a peek.
The next level of this method is to minimise visual memory (if you're daring - and certainly a must for those people who like to "play for the sky" or "sleep", as i like to put it). Just close your eyes, off the lights, close the curtains, and just let your muscle(i prefer this term) memory loose. An advantage of this is you train your hearing more, say listening to the different voices of a fugue for example.
I've worked with this method for a few years, and so far not that many qualms about it. Of course it has its cons as well as its pros, but i've decided that this is how i've been working, so why change now. As long as i stay away from serial music (i'm quite certain there's no way to memorise something like schoenberg) should be fine. Once when i was in "hardcore practice" mode I've memorised a couple of liszt etudes in 3 days each. Complete Ravel concerto in a month. Not saying that it'll work for all people, since it'll definately get some getting used to.
My recommendation is only try a different method if the current one you're using doesn't seem to work. And don't sue me if this doesn't work for you either

hehe just kiddin...