The Memory Map 3.0 ©
Melissa Colgin Abeln, D.M.A.
The University of Texas at El Paso
In the flute world, memorization is less frequently required, and yet the benefits are tremendous.
- Why memorize?
- More complete mastery.
- Deeper appreciation/understanding
- Greater freedom to move and express the music
- Enhance communication with the audience—NO MUSIC STAND IN THE WAY
- Why memorize by mapping?
- Increase efficiency in practice
- Retain more of what you have learned
- Increase performance level
- Achieve artistic mastery
- Eye/brain function differs widely
- Strong muscles/coordination—great readers
- Weak eye/slower brain function—slower to focus—poor readers
- Memorization a natural compensation
- Various Approaches to Memorization
- Consensus among many
- Finger/memory memory—what flows automatically without conscious thought
- Aural memory—what we hear before playing
- Eye/visual memory—mental images of the music
- brain memory---understanding of the musical elements coming together
- Pianist Martha Beth Lewis
- Brute force method
- Analysis—form, harmony
- Armchair memorizing (mental work without the instrument)
- Slow performance-fast performance
- Flutist Kimberly Gandrup “Creative Memorizing Tips”. Flute Talk Magazine, Feb. 2000
- Begin memorizing the most difficult section first
- Mark benchmarks of the form
- Mock performances front of friends and family
- Practice in the dark
- An Expanded Approach
- Pianist Rebecca Shockley “Mapping Music: Some Simple Strategies to Help Students Learn” American Music Teacher 56:2 (Oct-Nov. 2006)
- Concept of mapping music for learning and memorization
- Any stage of learning, all levels
- Diagram music using pictures, symbols, colors
- Any image that triggers memory of a line, section, page.
- The Memory Map –The Inspiration
- Kenneth Levy’s model of a musical graph (Music: A Listener’s Introduction, 1983)
- A musical work reduced to a graph, with shorthand notations
- Form, harmony
- Phraseology, theme construction
- Rhythmic structures
- Other distinguishing features
- Helpful format
- To Begin Mapping
- Form--Determine the main sections
- Harmony--Simple chord symbols, progressions, key areas
- Add Details as You Practice
- NO RIGHT OR WRONG WAY
- NO RULES—ONLY SUGGESTIONS
- Elaborate means aren’t necessary
- Handwritten rhythms and directional lines within a framework on a notepad works for some.
- Discovery over time
- Articulations
- Dynamics, nuances
- Repetition/development
- Color/timbre possibilities
- Map Template—See Front Page
- Written notes on the left
- Musical or rhythmic notations on the right
- Some prefer blank paper
- Example: Boehm’s Scottish Air
- Map shows melodic contour,
- directional lines for the melody
- rhythmic stems.
- Map to solve problems
- Marco Granados’ Hibiee-Jibiees
- Impossible page turns.
- Map shows enough detail to trigger memory
- I used this one for an 8 a.m. performance
- Summary
- Memorization is a process of hard work, discovery
and liberation.
- The Memory Map assists the musician to
fully prepare a work.
- A written map becomes a visual log of your work
- The Memory map is a significant teaching tool.
- Time spent on the process of discovery and recording details becomes a worthy investment that pays handsomely for the near-future performance as well as those in years or (decades later.
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SOURCES CONSULTED
Andreas, Jamie. On Memorizing: Part 2.
Dunsby, Jonathon. Memory and memorizing. Grove Online:
Gandrup, Kimberly. Creative Memorizing Tips. Flute Talk Magazine. Vol. 19, no. 6. February, 2000.
Houser, Virginia. Memorization-An Integral Part Of Musicianship at Every Level.
www.personal.ksu.edu/~vhouser/memorize.htm.
Kelly, Robert T. “How to Memorize Music.”
Lewis, Martha Beth.
Levy, Kenneth. Music: A Listener’s Introduction. New York: Harper and Rowe, 1983.
Ramirez, Catherine. Doctoral dissertation in progress, notes and discussion, July 2011.
Thomson, William. Music for Listeners. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1978.
Shockley, Rebecca. Mapping Music: Some Simple Strategies to Help Students Learn. American Music
Teacher 56:2 (Oct-Nov. 2006), p. 34-36.
______. Mapping Music: For Faster Learning and Secure Memory. A-R Editions,
2nd Edition, 2001.
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