" No one is ever completely free of the fear of memory slips. Every performer, no matter how accomplished or how experienced, has had to deal with a memory slip at some point." Stewart Gordon

When you have a memory slip, don`t stop! The best choice is to improvise in the style of the piece until the "next" start-up point.
The memory has to be exercised and developed on a regular basis to function at a high level during performance. Here are some strategies:
1. First analyze the musical structure
What`s the overall form? Where do phrases begin and end? Is there repetition even with small variation? Do you detect rhythmic, harmonic or melodic patterns?
2. Start with a plan
Break the material down into small units that seem easy. After ingraining segments A and B individually, execute A-B once. Next, ingrain segments C and D. Run C-D and then execute A-B-C-D.
3. Avoid trying to take in too much at once
Our brain can store only a finite amount at a time. For this reason we should have a balance between work and rest.
4. Do mental rehearsals
Perform the entire piece as well as selected sections from different areas of a piece. Play in a slow, moderate and final tempo.
5. Use multiple memory types
Aural memory- remember how the music sounds.
Visual/Photographic memory- remember the score and see it in your head when you are playing.
Tactile/Muscle memory- your hands and fingers "know" the music.
Conceptual memory- remember the structure of music.
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