Great video, this answered the question I just left on your newest video... For piano, I was struck by a quote, "Amateurs practice until they get it right, Professionals practice until they can't get it wrong."
Well I'm 54 and just starting out as I love this instrument. I don't care how long it takes I'm going to learn to not only play but enjoy making music. A great comment attached gave me some more confidence I.e if you tell yourself you cant play...you won't! So thank you for the video. You have started me on my journey!
1. Memorize right hand (keep checking that you're memorizing the section correctly) 2. Memorize left hand (keep checking that you're memorizing the section correctly) 3. Put hands together (try to do it from memory the first time & do it very slowly) 4. Move to the next section (size of the section depends on the complexity of the piece, but each step for one section shouldn't take more than 1 or 2 minutes) 5. Connect from the beginning facets to take into account when memorizing: 1. Notes 2. Rhythm 3. Fingering 4. Phrasing 5. Expression (dynamics, written words e.g. rallentando, accelerando, etc.)
toothless toe, maybe, but what she means is that if you practice it correctly, it'll be great, but if you always practice wrong, you will perform "wrong."
This instructor/teacher is so inviting and motivated. His joy of playing translates to students. He is very articulated. His methods really help. Added value, very much appreciated, Thank you,
The ultimate test how well you know the music is if you would be able to play it mentally away from the piano. You may need to move your fingers in order to get through the piece at first. It is a advisable to have the score next to you so you can refer to it when you are unclear about what is written. Practice this way until you can play through the entire piece away from the piano hearing all the parts and imagining all the finger and hand movements.
Kind of memory overkill, in my view. Just practise the piece so you can start fresh from any given measure or distinct phrase including fingering plus chord or scale knowledge. This will weave analytic and muscle memory together into a very tight fabric. Enhance with slow and hands separate work for more difficult passages.
@@douglascutler1037 Is his approach radical? I'm new to the piano, pre-Grade 1. I liked the sound of what he's saying, and I like his videos generally, but my teacher isn't keen; he said it's difficult to refer again to the score once you've memorized a piece, and you might have to refer to it again. But I'm thinking now that if you've memorized it properly you wouldn't have to refer to the score again (?).
@@pauljohnbodie5631 It's not radical but it is extremely hi-end, pro-level stuff. What is described is the type of mental agility and ability possessed by top professional concerts pianists. It can take many years to get good at and is enhanced by a thorough understanding of musical theory as well as a a highly trained inner ear. Let's say you're a top concert pianist rehearsing a concerto with orchestra and conductor. The conductor might expect you to start the performance from any bar that they might want to polish. You need to know the piece so well you can enter at any measure at full speed. I would not recommend beginners in piano concern themselves with memorizing every single note and keystroke. It is better to have an enjoyable experience of music where at least some of the time you allow things to work on auto pilot or muscle memory. Muscle memory is also an important performance component and not just the mental or analytical approach described. Also, there is nothing wrong with learning music where you still need to look at the music. While pro level solo piano is almost always performed from memory, much collaborative piano performance like choral accompaniment, vocal accompaniment or small ensemble playing is performed from the sheet music - even at the pro level.
@@douglascutler1037 LPV's method is very good though. And it does begin with 'the ultimate test ------ is'. That's being at the 'top of the game'. It is probably on the level of what those stunt pilots do ---- eg. red bull stunt plane racing, or maybe Blue Angels. They go through in their mind and their body what needs to be done - accurately, precisely and pretty much automatically and very smoothly. For Blue Angels and stunt plane racing, their lives depend on it. For concert pianists and professional musicians etc ----- errors and stumbles etc are generally not an option. But - naturally, the abilities of people do vary - among people.
This is such valuable information! I am re-learning the piano after many year of not playing. There are times when it feels like moving bricks from the front to the back year, one at a time. I plan to watch every one of your videos to provide a new foundation! Thank you!
I'm so glad you appreciate this video and so many people have watched it. It is one of the most important things I learned studying with my father, concert pianist Morton Estrin.
WOW,,,,, Robert Estrin really shines as a teacher, I wish I would have found someone like him many years ago..... Words really do not convey the value of what he shares with us here on RUclips...
I don't interact with a lot of musicians, this was actually very encouraging, thank you. I've always thought there was some truth in this principle with drums too. Play it as slow as you have to until you play it perfect, and only then speed up or add more.
Dude! Thank you so much! I don't even play piano. I'm a beginner learning the guitar. I'm learning to play really simple pieces like "The Star Spangled Banner," or the beginning of "Ode to Joy." I can play the pieces pretty easily when sight reading but can't play them without the sheet music. I think this will help. This concepts even help for my graduate studies in anesthesia! Thanks again.
Excellent video! I'm a self learner piano player, been practicing for 3 months, and I always thought that piano players read and played at the same time, I had no idea that memorization was so important (thank god I'm good at that). I realized that on my own when I saw that there was no way I could keep my eyes on the sheet and play at the same time. The sheet is there to you to learn the song and to help you along the way when you are playing, but your focus em 95% on the keys and, if you are playing the song with ease, it's because you memorized it.
you are not exactly correct, memorizing and sight reading a piece are 2 different things. A good sight reader can play a piece at tempo without ever played the piece before and this takes years, as to memorize a piece is simply to not depend on the sheet music when for example you need to perform for an audience.
Daniel Ribas Tandeitnik I read sheet music as I play, partly because I'm a fast reader but also because I have not the best memory. Depends of people, I think both sight reading and memorization are important skills
I don't think there's a rule to it, it's the same principle as typing on a keyboard, for example I could say something for you to type and you wouldn't need to look at the keys themselves in order to write it it would just flow subconsciously, Hey if Stevie Wonder can memorise then anyone can.
very helpful! i have to start memorizing this semester and i have never been taught how. My teacher told me that learning harmonies is the key to memorization, you are the first person i have come across on youtube that has mentioned this.
Through the trials and struggles of impatient playing, I've learned this theory to be absolutely true! It can be hard to slow down and break a piece down bit by bit, but by exercising patience and diligence it really does pay off [in memorizing]. Ultimately, it actually saves you time!
It has worked for thousands of students of my father's, sister's and myself, as well as other former students of my father who have taught this method.
When i was a child, with a piece i was desperate to play, an active mind and aural, visual, kinesthetic information sources (teacher playing, music, a mirror, the feel of the instrument) and often the stress of performance, i can remember all of those pieces very well. As an adult learning something with less time for a bit of fun but feeling different i couldnt memorise something i did 2 weeks prior. So i went back to being a kid in my approach.
Robert is wonderful. Your dad must have been such a great teacher imparting his wisdom on many. Timing is the hardest for me. I try to use the metronome often. If fingerings are not suggested, I try to come up with something comfortable, but it may not be correct. I like to practice the scale for the song to ingrain the notes in my head before attempting the piece.
im 23 as well and i started about 2 months ago. but i just like playing piano so much and i believe i can still become decent. i think its important what you believe. if you believe what people are telling you, that its impossible to become good at this age it will be harder. im tutoring kids at school and i made the same experience. if they think they cant do it, they cant!
Wow. I have never had a piano teacher who was ever able to explain how to memorize music. (Not even college professors who I have taken lesson from.) Guess what? I have never been successful at memorizing piano music. I have read from so many sources that being able to visualize the music away from the piano is key to memorizing and yet I literally cannot form mental images (a condition known as Aphantasia) so I have been convinced that I can't do this. I now feel motivated to find a simple piece to test this memorization method out on. Thank you for this!
i memorizes automatically from age 4 to ag 45 when member of my family got into a traumatic situation. i took care of it and never memorized anything gain. i am in tearsMuriel
thankyou thankyou thankyou, best lesson i ever had, im self taught learning by just putting sheet music in front of me and learning it all at once, i started right off with beethoven sonatas, took me 1 year to learn the first and leaned so many bad habits, but your ideas are so simple wish i knew this 40 years ago when i started, i expect this will actually make my playing decent, awesome and thanks again
Very, very useful! I always try to analyze the music before hand by writing down each chord and then figuring out how all the chords actually function using roman numeral analysis. This technique helps me to, not only memorize the music, but also understand it better.
Thank you so much! I only had two years of piano when I was in the 5th and 6th grade -- decades ago! We just bought a beautiful 1936 Hamilton Baldwin and I am trying to learn again on my own and have already made the mistakes which you reference in your video. After 47 years since my last lesson, I am considering taking lessons again and learn how to play well to enjoy the rest of my years. Thank you so much.
Thank you for the lessons. I've wondered why it took me so long to learn certain pieces. This helps out a lot. I will stay tuned. You give excellent lessons. You answer the questions that most teachers can't answer right off. You make learning more interesting and fun!
I thank you. I have just taken up the piano again after fifty odd years and am surprised and a little intimidated by how much I've forgotten...so I am right back to first lesson stage...I like your thoughts and "tips" ...shall try them and hopefully surprise my teacher at third lesson. Shall be following you..much appreciation
Thank you! This was very helpful to me. I'm trying to learn to play Beethoven's Sonata No 8, 2nd Movement "Pathetique". Your lesson on trills helped me to figure out how to do the fingering, position of fingers, and ending to transition into the next set of notes.
Just found your site....many many thanks! I am a senior, (played by ear all my life)....now take classical piano lessons? I love it so???? Along side my Teacher yours posts are so valuable!!!!!just listened to, how to memorize? I have a new piece to learn....Clementi Sonata in C ...Ops 36 part one.....so I’m going to try to memorize....according to your teaching!!!!!, Wish me success! Thank yu again for your sharing....valuable! Martha
I like the way you teach. Have heard about your method. Have mainly sight read music and would like to begin again to memorize to have more freedom. Thank you!
1 of the easiest and most accessible tool for memorization is recording. Nowadays there are so many little gadgets you carry around may have a video or sound recording feature. Instead of playing the same thing over and over, you play it as many times as it takes to get the right notes into a recorder. The rest of the time listen to the playback. Once you get the tune into your head, playing the right notes become much easier.
Great video. Just one more suggestion (I read about it and I agree): when you practice (one hand or both together), try always chunking snippets with an overlap. So, for instance, if the first 4 bars are "A B A C | D A E D | A B B C | B D C B", supposing a 2 bars snippet, the first chunk would be "A B A C | D A E D", and the second one for instance "E D | A B B C | B D C B" (using E D of the fist chunk to make a connection with the second one). This way it will be way easier to put all of the snippets together.
ive been on youtube searching around for teaching. your sir are by far the best so far. your have some real spunk and its fun to listen to your teaching. Also you dont just say the lesson, you seem to really love the music and that the most important part for me. I cant read music for sh*t but I love to improvise, seems more fun. maybe im wrong
This is a great video. This is kind of how I've unconsciously learned to memorize, but your explanation and the way you laid it out is perfect. Thank you so much for making these videos!
Good tips. Started with Bach's Goldberg Var. the Aria around 30 bars 1 at a time like a turtle but eventually got to the finish. The last piece played was the last composition of Bach Contrapunctus Fugue #1 (BWV 1080) piano arrangement. My city has "Play Me, I'm Yours" pianos in public areas. Went to 3 separate ones and played the Fugue #1 lasting between 3 1/2 - 4m from memory. Any piece of music involves interpretation. Gets a bit flexible with tempo & dynamics with the right notes...
Thank you - the parabel with straightening out the paper reminds me of a very important lesson from computerscience, regarding writing computer programs: It is sometimes (very often indeed) easier to rewrite a program than it is to correct the mistakes. There is a psychological explanation to that fact: You need to make design decisions, and those decisions are the real "glue" which makes the program stick. Like the dynamics, they are a most important part of the musical experience. :)
OMG THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!! I would always get bored trying to perfect simple songs like "Joy To The World" and eventually give up because it was too simple and therefore un-entertaining. Just learned a similar length-ed song in less then 5 minutes thanks to your tips!
WOW! thank you! i need to know this .i am a Mentally challenged with dyslexic Person I Play! from Monday to Friday everyday 10 am to 5 pm with a mine 15 break ..i live in Oregon Eugene area thank you! wIth a SMILE!
Good advice. I will have to apply it. I always hated recitals as a child and memorized music through muscle memory. Memorizing always seems to be more work than I want it to be. I am not a professional pianist but do accompanying. Your advice on sight reading would probably interest me more.
I have many resources on sight-reading. Here are some for you: livingpianos.com/how-to-practice-the-piano-part-2-sight-read-almost-anything/ and livingpianos.com/how-to-sight-read-part1-why-sightreading-is-important/ as well as livingpianos.com/tips-for-improving-your-sightreading-sightreading-part-2/
Never too late to learn to memorize, thanks for all the tips. Now, I am learning a piano piece to play with cello, I've been working on just getting from A to Z with one hand and then the other, have managed to put them together a little, thought I needed to memorize it and then voila, here's your video. GREAT! Thank you! How do I approach learning without the cello here. Tape the cello and learn to play against it? Difficult to hear the cello part in my head, when learning the piano. HELP!
Thanks for the input. I wished I learned this secret then I was young. The two allegories about memorizing is the best and not just for piano and music. Especially the allegory about the paper is really important for humanity today then we have so much knowledge about different models for the society.
Sigh. I wish you were in Colorado to teach me lessons. You're fabulous and you have such a way with analogies. Thank you. Please keep making these videos! :-)
One problem I had when memorizing music is that if I lost my place somewhere in the middle of the piece I had to go all the way back to the begining and start all over again.
So useful. I was also at a loss on how to memorize--shall I remember the notes from the sheet but they will not mean anything unless I also know the sound so it is only logical that I memorize the sound of each hand, tho I prefer to memorize/play them together so I know how it sounds. However, I refer to the music sheet for a "pattern" on the "difficult" parts that my brain cannot remember. Also like "silvizzle," I am glad to know I am not the only one who "questions" the notes :).
I enjoy very much your videos and comments.I have a photographic memory, and when I learn a piece by heart, at first I rvisualise important parts of the score, and later (when I connect all the phrases together) the position of the hands.I 'orchestrate' the movements of my hands, and always have a 'point de repère' that I can refer to in case I get lost I have friends who can transpose a Ballade of Chopin because of their musical concept of the piece, but I rely on my photographic memory. Thanks
Great video! I'd say the 5 facets to take into account should include a new Number 1 - Chords and Chord Progression. This will help in understanding, fingering and memorization.
This gentleman is so articulate and professional, you can actually hear his passion through his voice as he tries to guide you... But for some reason he reminds me of a slimy businessman.... But keep up the amazing work mate! Everything you post is valued.
Hello there! This was very informative. I will now go home and do my homework with this technique! My piano teacher will be proud of me!! Thanks so much!! ;)
This is a good video with very good tips. What I find in the beginning when playing more difficult pieces you tend to have trouble keeping up with a fast tempo. You listen to a pro play the same piece it usually sounds much faster. That you're constantly slowing down. Especially working with 18th century music you have a lot of ornamentations that are almost like running through them as 64th notes just to keep the right tempo.
Afgelopen dec leerde ik een stuk “les embrums” voor mijn toonmoment. Ik heb een oogafwijking en een maat leerde ik verkeerd. Het klonk ook goed en daardoor hoorde ik het niet. 5 dagen voor het toonmoment in de piano les bracht ik het stuk naar voor. Het heeft me uren gekost om het uiteindelijk juist te spelen. Ik ben 1 jaar bezig. Begonnen op mijn 58. Nu les ik dubbel op wanneer ik iets nieuws leer.
What a treasure this man is.
Great video, this answered the question I just left on your newest video...
For piano, I was struck by a quote, "Amateurs practice until they get it right, Professionals practice until they can't get it wrong."
Well I'm 54 and just starting out as I love this instrument. I don't care how long it takes I'm going to learn to not only play but enjoy making music. A great comment attached gave me some more confidence I.e if you tell yourself you cant play...you won't! So thank you for the video. You have started me on my journey!
1. Memorize right hand (keep checking that you're memorizing the section correctly)
2. Memorize left hand (keep checking that you're memorizing the section correctly)
3. Put hands together (try to do it from memory the first time & do it very slowly)
4. Move to the next section (size of the section depends on the complexity of the piece, but each step for one section shouldn't take more than 1 or 2 minutes)
5. Connect from the beginning
facets to take into account when memorizing:
1. Notes
2. Rhythm
3. Fingering
4. Phrasing
5. Expression (dynamics, written words e.g. rallentando, accelerando, etc.)
I do this and
6. Play by feel. Memorize the feeling. Muscle memory
7. Play with eyes closed. Close eyes when practicing sections.
My Shakespeare director at school always say,"Practice doesn't make perfect, perfect practice makes perfect."
toothless toe, maybe, but what she means is that if you practice it correctly, it'll be great, but if you always practice wrong, you will perform "wrong."
that's what my band director says
Practice makes progress
This instructor/teacher is so inviting and motivated. His joy of playing translates to students. He is very articulated. His methods really help. Added value, very much appreciated, Thank you,
The ultimate test how well you know the music is if you would be able to play it mentally away from the piano. You may need to move your fingers in order to get through the piece at first. It is a advisable to have the score next to you so you can refer to it when you are unclear about what is written. Practice this way until you can play through the entire piece away from the piano hearing all the parts and imagining all the finger and hand movements.
Kind of memory overkill, in my view. Just practise the piece so you can start fresh from any given measure or distinct phrase including fingering plus chord or scale knowledge. This will weave analytic and muscle memory together into a very tight fabric. Enhance with slow and hands separate work for more difficult passages.
@@douglascutler1037 Is his approach radical? I'm new to the piano, pre-Grade 1. I liked the sound of what he's saying, and I like his videos generally, but my teacher isn't keen; he said it's difficult to refer again to the score once you've memorized a piece, and you might have to refer to it again. But I'm thinking now that if you've memorized it properly you wouldn't have to refer to the score again (?).
@@pauljohnbodie5631 It's not radical but it is extremely hi-end, pro-level stuff. What is described is the type of mental agility and ability possessed by top professional concerts pianists. It can take many years to get good at and is enhanced by a thorough understanding of musical theory as well as a a highly trained inner ear.
Let's say you're a top concert pianist rehearsing a concerto with orchestra and conductor. The conductor might expect you to start the performance from any bar that they might want to polish. You need to know the piece so well you can enter at any measure at full speed.
I would not recommend beginners in piano concern themselves with memorizing every single note and keystroke. It is better to have an enjoyable experience of music where at least some of the time you allow things to work on auto pilot or muscle memory. Muscle memory is also an important performance component and not just the mental or analytical approach described.
Also, there is nothing wrong with learning music where you still need to look at the music. While pro level solo piano is almost always performed from memory, much collaborative piano performance like choral accompaniment, vocal accompaniment or small ensemble playing is performed from the sheet music - even at the pro level.
@@douglascutler1037 Thanks, Douglas.
@@douglascutler1037 LPV's method is very good though. And it does begin with 'the ultimate test ------ is'. That's being at the 'top of the game'. It is probably on the level of what those stunt pilots do ---- eg. red bull stunt plane racing, or maybe Blue Angels. They go through in their mind and their body what needs to be done - accurately, precisely and pretty much automatically and very smoothly. For Blue Angels and stunt plane racing, their lives depend on it. For concert pianists and professional musicians etc ----- errors and stumbles etc are generally not an option. But - naturally, the abilities of people do vary - among people.
This is such valuable information! I am re-learning the piano after many year of not playing. There are times when it feels like moving bricks from the front to the back year, one at a time. I plan to watch every one of your videos to provide a new foundation! Thank you!
What a good teacher in all "aspects"....thank you for these videos, to maximize one's playing, "time is precious".... .....
I'm so glad you appreciate this video and so many people have watched it. It is one of the most important things I learned studying with my father, concert pianist Morton Estrin.
Mark hamill teaching piano! Love it! :)
WOW,,,,, Robert Estrin really shines as a teacher, I wish I would have found someone like him many years ago..... Words really do not convey the value of what he shares with us here on RUclips...
Agreed. and twelve years later from when this video was posted, he's still churning out invaluable tips!
One of the VERY BEST explanations on MEMORIZING MUSIC !!!!
I don't interact with a lot of musicians, this was actually very encouraging, thank you. I've always thought there was some truth in this principle with drums too. Play it as slow as you have to until you play it perfect, and only then speed up or add more.
Dude! Thank you so much! I don't even play piano. I'm a beginner learning the guitar. I'm learning to play really simple pieces like "The Star Spangled Banner," or the beginning of "Ode to Joy." I can play the pieces pretty easily when sight reading but can't play them without the sheet music. I think this will help. This concepts even help for my graduate studies in anesthesia! Thanks again.
Excellent video! I'm a self learner piano player, been practicing for 3 months, and I always thought that piano players read and played at the same time, I had no idea that memorization was so important (thank god I'm good at that). I realized that on my own when I saw that there was no way I could keep my eyes on the sheet and play at the same time. The sheet is there to you to learn the song and to help you along the way when you are playing, but your focus em 95% on the keys and, if you are playing the song with ease, it's because you memorized it.
you are not exactly correct, memorizing and sight reading a piece are 2 different things. A good sight reader can play a piece at tempo without ever played the piece before and this takes years, as to memorize a piece is simply to not depend on the sheet music when for example you need to perform for an audience.
Daniel Ribas Tandeitnik I read sheet music as I play, partly because I'm a fast reader but also because I have not the best memory. Depends of people, I think both sight reading and memorization are important skills
I don't think there's a rule to it, it's the same principle as typing on a keyboard, for example I could say something for you to type and you wouldn't need to look at the keys themselves in order to write it it would just flow subconsciously,
Hey if Stevie Wonder can memorise then anyone can.
very helpful! i have to start memorizing this semester and i have never been taught how. My teacher told me that learning harmonies is the key to memorization, you are the first person i have come across on youtube that has mentioned this.
The tips about learning the chords first in the left hand really helped me
Simple and extremely helpful. I wish I knew these tips when I was a teenager but I believe it is never too late!
Through the trials and struggles of impatient playing, I've learned this theory to be absolutely true! It can be hard to slow down and break a piece down bit by bit, but by exercising patience and diligence it really does pay off [in memorizing]. Ultimately, it actually saves you time!
The best breakdown of how to learn a piece I’ve come across. This is going to be my template from here on in. Thankyou Robert!
It has worked for thousands of students of my father's, sister's and myself, as well as other former students of my father who have taught this method.
When i was a child, with a piece i was desperate to play, an active mind and aural, visual, kinesthetic information sources (teacher playing, music, a mirror, the feel of the instrument) and often the stress of performance, i can remember all of those pieces very well. As an adult learning something with less time for a bit of fun but feeling different i couldnt memorise something i did 2 weeks prior. So i went back to being a kid in my approach.
Memorizing a piece came to me without any plan. I practiced it over and over again. And before I realized it, I had it memorized
Robert is wonderful. Your dad must have been such a great teacher imparting his wisdom on many. Timing is the hardest for me. I try to use the metronome often. If fingerings are not suggested, I try to come up with something comfortable, but it may not be correct. I like to practice the scale for the song to ingrain the notes in my head before attempting the piece.
Thank you for a great video! I'm quite new to the piano and this was very helpful!
im 23 as well and i started about 2 months ago. but i just like playing piano so much and i believe i can still become decent. i think its important what you believe. if you believe what people are telling you, that its impossible to become good at this age it will be harder. im tutoring kids at school and i made the same experience. if they think they cant do it, they cant!
Wow. I have never had a piano teacher who was ever able to explain how to memorize music. (Not even college professors who I have taken lesson from.) Guess what? I have never been successful at memorizing piano music. I have read from so many sources that being able to visualize the music away from the piano is key to memorizing and yet I literally cannot form mental images (a condition known as Aphantasia) so I have been convinced that I can't do this. I now feel motivated to find a simple piece to test this memorization method out on. Thank you for this!
This video may help you: ruclips.net/video/TbPArwBiNNE/видео.html
i memorizes automatically from age 4 to ag 45 when member of my family got into a traumatic situation. i took care of it and never memorized anything gain. i am in tearsMuriel
thankyou thankyou thankyou, best lesson i ever had, im self taught learning by just putting sheet music in front of me and learning it all at once, i started right off with beethoven sonatas, took me 1 year to learn the first and leaned so many bad habits, but your ideas are so simple wish i knew this 40 years ago when i started, i expect this will actually make my playing decent, awesome and thanks again
Very, very useful! I always try to analyze the music before hand by writing down each chord and then figuring out how all the chords actually function using roman numeral analysis. This technique helps me to, not only memorize the music, but also understand it better.
Thank you so much! I only had two years of piano when I was in the 5th and 6th grade -- decades ago! We just bought a beautiful 1936 Hamilton Baldwin and I am trying to learn again on my own and have already made the mistakes which you reference in your video. After 47 years since my last lesson, I am considering taking lessons again and learn how to play well to enjoy the rest of my years. Thank you so much.
Thank you for the lessons. I've wondered why it took me so long to learn certain pieces. This helps out a lot. I will stay tuned. You give excellent lessons. You answer the questions that most teachers can't answer right off. You make learning more interesting and fun!
I thank you. I have just taken up the piano again after fifty odd years and am surprised and a little intimidated by how much I've forgotten...so I am right back to first lesson stage...I like your thoughts and "tips" ...shall try them and hopefully surprise my teacher at third lesson. Shall be following you..much appreciation
thank you much no matter what you teach makes me better on my play i am 55 and re started piano after 40 years look forward for more tips
Nelly
Thank you! This was very helpful to me. I'm trying to learn to play Beethoven's Sonata No 8, 2nd Movement "Pathetique". Your lesson on trills helped me to figure out how to do the fingering, position of fingers, and ending to transition into the next set of notes.
great stuff you're got there - what you offer can be a precious help TO ANYONE ! thanks a million
Just found your site....many many thanks! I am a senior, (played by ear all my life)....now take classical piano lessons? I love it so???? Along side my Teacher yours posts are so valuable!!!!!just listened to, how to memorize? I have a new piece to learn....Clementi Sonata in C ...Ops 36 part one.....so I’m going to try to memorize....according to your teaching!!!!!,
Wish me success!
Thank yu again for your sharing....valuable!
Martha
Thank You, Thank You, Thank You, worth every penny
I like the way you teach. Have heard about your method. Have mainly sight read music and would like to begin again to memorize to have more freedom. Thank you!
This is how I've been doing it since I started, happy to know I've been doing it right, excellent Robert
Thank you for these tips!! I’m excited to get started with this approach.
1 of the easiest and most accessible tool for memorization is recording. Nowadays there are so many little gadgets you carry around may have a video or sound recording feature.
Instead of playing the same thing over and over, you play it as many times as it takes to get the right notes into a recorder. The rest of the time listen to the playback. Once you get the tune into your head, playing the right notes become much easier.
Great video. Just one more suggestion (I read about it and I agree): when you practice (one hand or both together), try always chunking snippets with an overlap. So, for instance, if the first 4 bars are "A B A C | D A E D | A B B C | B D C B", supposing a 2 bars snippet, the first chunk would be "A B A C | D A E D", and the second one for instance "E D | A B B C | B D C B" (using E D of the fist chunk to make a connection with the second one). This way it will be way easier to put all of the snippets together.
I think he alluded to that but suggested just adding one note of the next phrase to make the connection.
Awesome teacher!
ive been on youtube searching around for teaching. your sir are by far the best so far. your have some real spunk and its fun to listen to your teaching. Also you dont just say the lesson, you seem to really love the music and that the most important part for me.
I cant read music for sh*t but I love to improvise, seems more fun. maybe im wrong
Very good video! Memory in piano learning and performance is so very important!
Excellent teaching tips and implications for ALL instruments, not just piano. Bravo!!!
Geez i can see some quality teaching here. for years i've been starting then stopping for months over and over cause I couldn't make any progress.
This is a great video. This is kind of how I've unconsciously learned to memorize, but your explanation and the way you laid it out is perfect. Thank you so much for making these videos!
Thats some great video you have prepared. You have included stories to make it more interesting. Will watch the rest of the videos as well.
Excellent
Thank you for sharing this!
Highly appreciated
Wonderful, just wonderful -- and exactly what I needed! Thanks.
Well done, love it
Great videos, I appreciate your enthusiasm
Many thanks, Robert. I much appreciate your help.
A very valuable step by step advices on music memoraization. A disciplin which every piano~loving and keyboardist should follow. Congrat. Thanks.
wow soooo stunning
Good tips. Started with Bach's Goldberg Var. the Aria around 30 bars 1 at a time like a turtle but eventually got to the finish.
The last piece played was the last composition of Bach Contrapunctus Fugue #1 (BWV 1080) piano arrangement. My city has "Play Me, I'm Yours" pianos in public areas. Went to 3 separate ones and played the Fugue #1 lasting between 3 1/2 - 4m from memory. Any piece of music involves interpretation. Gets a bit flexible with tempo & dynamics with the right notes...
Love it! this is my weakness in music, bad memory! Thank you!
Here is a video where I show how I practice using this method: livingpianos.com/how-to-practice-a-new-piece-on-the-piano/
@@LivingPianosVideosvery helpful,,,thank you!!! applying this method to a piece I'm learning now!
Excellent! Truly top notch advice.
Thank you - the parabel with straightening out the paper reminds me of a very important lesson from computerscience, regarding writing computer programs: It is sometimes (very often indeed) easier to rewrite a program than it is to correct the mistakes. There is a psychological explanation to that fact: You need to make design decisions, and those decisions are the real "glue" which makes the program stick. Like the dynamics, they are a most important part of the musical experience. :)
Thank you for real techniques for learning to memorize!
OMG THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!!
I would always get bored trying to perfect simple songs like "Joy To The World" and eventually give up because it was too simple and therefore un-entertaining.
Just learned a similar length-ed song in less then 5 minutes thanks to your tips!
True
thank you for teaching a valuable lesson for memorization piano music.
Thanks for your advice and will like to play piano like a pro but I dont know how to start. Bless u and ur family..
WOW! thank you! i need to know this .i am a Mentally challenged with dyslexic Person I Play! from Monday to Friday everyday 10 am to 5 pm with a mine 15 break ..i live in Oregon Eugene area thank you! wIth a SMILE!
Thank you so much for the memorization tips. I've always been very lacking in this area and your instruction will help immensely. Thanks. Brandon
Splendid ! thanx ! I have such engrained mistakes such as described. In pieces I learned, or not ! Regards from Brazil.
Thank you so uch . THiis makes clear sense to me. I have been making the mistakes that you pointed out commonly made in conventional practice.
Good advice. I will have to apply it. I always hated recitals as a child and memorized music through muscle memory. Memorizing always seems to be more work than I want it to be. I am not a professional pianist but do accompanying. Your advice on sight reading would probably interest me more.
I have many resources on sight-reading. Here are some for you: livingpianos.com/how-to-practice-the-piano-part-2-sight-read-almost-anything/ and livingpianos.com/how-to-sight-read-part1-why-sightreading-is-important/ as well as livingpianos.com/tips-for-improving-your-sightreading-sightreading-part-2/
Never too late to learn to memorize, thanks for all the tips. Now, I am learning a piano piece to play with cello, I've been working on just getting from A to Z with one hand and then the other, have managed to put them together a little, thought I needed to memorize it and then voila, here's your video. GREAT! Thank you! How do I approach learning without the cello here. Tape the cello and learn to play against it? Difficult to hear the cello part in my head, when learning the piano. HELP!
Great lessons. Since retiring, I am trying to improve my piano playing. Thanks for the guidance. You're a great teacher.
Thank you very much, very good idea. Now I know why I am still in beginner book 2 after many years. Will try your method asap.
Excellent advice thank you, I’m hoping to memorise some pieces I have to play at two weddings to help with nerves…..
Thanks for the input. I wished I learned this secret then I was young.
The two allegories about memorizing is the best and not just for piano and music. Especially the allegory about the paper is really important for humanity today then we have so much knowledge about different models for the society.
This is really good stuff... I am an amateur guitarist and this summarizes what I learnt on memorization. Thanks.
Sigh. I wish you were in Colorado to teach me lessons. You're fabulous and you have such a way with analogies. Thank you. Please keep making these videos! :-)
Any idea where he is based?
One problem I had when memorizing music is that if I lost my place somewhere in the middle of the piece I had to go all the way back to the begining and start all over again.
Thanks, very good lesson in a very simple and effective way. I feel very bad, I have started it very late (60).
I play piano accordion. Your tips work well for learning accordion scores.
So useful. I was also at a loss on how to memorize--shall I remember the notes from the sheet but they will not mean anything unless I also know the sound so it is only logical that I memorize the sound of each hand, tho I prefer to memorize/play them together so I know how it sounds. However, I refer to the music sheet for a "pattern" on the "difficult" parts that my brain cannot remember. Also like "silvizzle," I am glad to know I am not the only one who "questions" the notes :).
I enjoy very much your videos and comments.I have a photographic memory, and when I learn a piece by heart, at first I rvisualise important parts of the score, and later (when I connect all the phrases together) the position of the hands.I 'orchestrate' the movements of my hands, and always have a 'point de repère' that I can refer to in case I get lost I have friends who can transpose a Ballade of Chopin because of their musical concept of the piece, but I rely on my photographic memory. Thanks
Great tips! Thank you!!! I am a beginner and the breakdown is making things much easier for me.
Great video!
I'd say the 5 facets to take into account should include a new Number 1 - Chords and Chord Progression.
This will help in understanding, fingering and memorization.
This is an excellent point: livingpianos.com/how-to-memorize-music-faster/
That was very heloful!
I will learn my next piece by this method from the start
This gentleman is so articulate and professional, you can actually hear his passion through his voice as he tries to guide you... But for some reason he reminds me of a slimy businessman.... But keep up the amazing work mate! Everything you post is valued.
The type of person to scam most likely wouldn't put in the years of discipline it takes to get as good at piano as he is.
Hello there! This was very informative. I will now go home and do my homework with this technique! My piano teacher will be proud of me!! Thanks so much!! ;)
Great video and explanation. Thanks.
This is a good video with very good tips. What I find in the beginning when playing more difficult pieces you tend to have trouble keeping up with a fast tempo. You listen to a pro play the same piece it usually sounds much faster. That you're constantly slowing down. Especially working with 18th century music you have a lot of ornamentations that are almost like running through them as 64th notes just to keep the right tempo.
This is great, thank you for your generosity in sharing🎉
Thanks for so many tips... You´ve really helped me to learn to play the piano. Wish you the best!
nice pic
Certainly some of the best practicing advice. 👍
You are a wise man.Thanks
Great tutorial, and I love your voice!
You are brilliant, Robert.
Thank you for this most valuable instruction.
Afgelopen dec leerde ik een stuk “les embrums” voor mijn toonmoment. Ik heb een oogafwijking en een maat leerde ik verkeerd. Het klonk ook goed en daardoor hoorde ik het niet. 5 dagen voor het toonmoment in de piano les bracht ik het stuk naar voor. Het heeft me uren gekost om het uiteindelijk juist te spelen. Ik ben 1 jaar bezig. Begonnen op mijn 58. Nu les ik dubbel op wanneer ik iets nieuws leer.
I've become a bit stuck with a passage of music in the piece I'm learning, this will certainly help!
Wonderful video. Thanks for the pointers. This is exactly how I memorize music, but I can improve by working on smaller sections.
Great lesson! Thanx!
Sir, you have memorised your script for this video very well indeed.