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Vol. 13, No. 6: Dec.-Jan. 2008
 
pix Memorizing Tips pix
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pix pix by Sebastian Kalamajski  

Page added in February, 2001

 
pix About the Author    
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Sebastian Kalamajski, a guitarist from Sweden, began his music studies when he was seven years old by learning how to play piano.

Sebastian is currently studying for M.D. as a biomedical scientist. His new, large (370 pages) digital book is just being published on his web site.

His web site is at www.nordisc-music.com.

Send comments to Sebastian Kalamajski.



© Sebastian Kalamajski
All information we learn - chords, scales, licks - is preferably supposed to sink deep down into our brains to improve the ability to understand and retrieve the learned material. We do not want to forget most of the things we practiced and struggled with for 25 hours a day - we want to posess the ability to play anything and feel safe with everything we ever studied. Yet, many of us realize how hard it might be; once we forget something, it is hard to bring it back to life again. One of the reasons we forget information is because we let our brain think that the material we learned is useless. How? Lack of both repetition and usage of the material is one of the main causes. Another one, which I chose to discuss in this article, is an uncomplete understanding of the information. Our minds works better when all stuff we learn is clear and logical, rather than meaningless and diffuse. If you read on, you will learn some techniques to change your thinking process and strengthen your talent for remembering musical and non-musical things.

How can we make everything as meaningful as possible? It is all about learning all new information by making it familiar and understandable to you. The latter is very important - anything can be remembered better if you really know and grasp the material you study. For example, if you read a music theory book, do not disregard any information in it - rather read everything, and after finishing reading some lines make sure you understand everything. Try to explain the new material to yourself (a very good learning method!). Apply this material in any possible way to your instrument or music score, depending on the type of information you have learned. This is a real brain-teaser, it makes your gray cells work hard and force them to realize that the material you just have learned is very useful and may not be forgotten!

I also pointed out that a good way to store the information in your brain is by making it familiar and meaningful. What is meant by that? Consider the following example: you are about to learn a so-called Coltrane progression and learn how to make it familiar to be able to play it in any key. The progression is: Dmi7-Eb7-Abmaj7-B7-Emaj7-G7-Cmaj7. On the one hand you may see it as any random chord progression probably generated by some bad music computer software. You may not see any logic in it. But you do want to learn it and want to make it meaningful to you.

One of the tricks you can apply is to relate it to something you already know. Because we are all different and know a lot of different things, let us base this example on a professional guitarist. Any trained musician knows what an interval and tonality is. Most of musicians also know what a V-I cadence is. This is everything needed to know to make the above chord progression meaningful. The tonality of the progression is C major. What is the first chord in the progression? It is a II minor 7 chord. So starting on a IImi7 I go one half step up to a dominant 7 chord and resolve it to its tonic chord - maj 7, which makes a V-I cadence. Then a jump of a minor third interval up to another dominant 7 chord and once again, resolution to its tonic - another V-I cadence. Then another jump of a minor third up to another dominant 7 chord and resolution to its tonic - a V-I cadence again. This last tonic chord also turns out to be a I maj 7 chord of the used tonality. A simple summary: start on IImi7, up a half step, V-I, up a minor third, V-I, up a minor third, V-I. The end. This is the way it works, now I can easily use Coltrane progressions in any composition and any tonality I want. I made this progression familiar to myself by associating it to something I already know. You may of course associate this to something else, as long as you know what you are doing and can easily remember it.

Try to make all new information as meaningful to you as possible. Send a clear message to your brain so it will remember everything better. After all, you might have tortured yourself for hours learning all chords and scales and songs and... The next article will continue on this learning task. Until then, happy practicing!

I also urge you to check out my CD-ROM book for guitarists. It is packed with lots of useful information which will make your progress as a guitarist very fast. Check it out on the publishers website www.nordisc-music.com.

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