Originally posted by Richard Tarleton
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How do all these soloists manage to play such a huge repertoire of works by different composers from memory?
Well here are a few ways that you can try for yourself:
1. Take a work that you wish to learn by heart and copy it out onto a fresh sheet (sheets) of manuscript paper. The more diligently you copy it, the more completely those notes will find a place in your memory cells.
2. When learning to play a work, test your "photographic" memory. Believe it or not, everyone has some degree of photographic memory - otherwise, how would we recognise other people when we encounter them? So always practise a piece with the manuscript in front of you. Your brain will subconsciously take in everything - even the little tears, fly dirts and blots on the paper.
So when you stand up in front of an audience to perform a work, you are not only playing from memory, you are reading. from the copy that is in your memory. This is a skill which is subconsciously acquired by all performers.
It certainly worked for me, performing the Mozart concertos (1,3 and 4), Strauss No 1 and the two Haydn concertos as well as a couple of occasions when an orchestral part was missing but I had played it from the manuscript at previous concerts (RVW Wasps Overture is one example that I remember).
Try these things for yourselves - you may be surprised.
HS
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