Implicit memory allows us to play our instrument. Explicit memory allows us to play a specific piece of music. But explicit memory can also be divided into two kinds – semantic and episodic, and it takes both to memorize a piece of music. Semantic memory refers to factual knowledge.
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Read More »All memory other than short-term comes under the category of long-term memory. LTM is divided into two kinds: explicit and implicit. Explicit memory is memory for facts and events. It is memory that can be consciously recalled, like what you had for breakfast this morning, or memory for a specific piece of music. Explicit memory is sometimes called declarative memory because it is something you can declare verbally – or musically. Implicit memory is sometimes called procedural because it is the memory for how to do something – how to ride a bike, how to play the piano. We acquire implicit memory through repetition and practice, and once we have learned, the memory is so deeply embedded, we don’t forget. In fact, we usually don’t remember the learning process. I doubt that many of us recall the struggles we had learning to play our instrument. And while we certainly know how to tie our shoes and do so without thinking, if we are asked to explain the process to someone, we have difficulty. We can demonstrate easily because it’s a procedural memory, but explaining would be a challenge. Implicit memory allows us to play our instrument. Explicit memory allows us to play a specific piece of music. But explicit memory can also be divided into two kinds – semantic and episodic, and it takes both to memorize a piece of music. Semantic memory refers to factual knowledge. While our earliest knowledge of music is about pitches and rhythms, as we become more advanced, we add all kinds of theoretical, historical, and musical information to the complex framework that constitutes our semantic memory. And that is what we draw upon as we learn a specific piece of music. Semantic memory is knowing. Episodic memory is remembering – an important event, a movie, a particular piece of music. If we think about college commencement, we see the location in our mind, we hear the music that was played, we think about friends and family who were there, we can feel what it was like to walk across the stage to receive the degree, we may even conjure up the smells of the wonderful dinner we had. We can run the day more or less chronologically in our minds. (Of course, mine is so long ago, the chronology has become a bit fuzzy.) With music, memory obviously can’t be “more or less” chronological. Just as in our commencement memory – visual, auditory, motor, and cognitive elements are connected together in the brain to form various episodes in the music. But with music, episodic memory is associated with the exact serial order of events, with how the piece unfolds through time. We can remember many different sections, or episodes, in the music and those episodes in serial order form the explicit memory of the piece – the memory that we are using when performing. We obviously don’t learn – or memorize – entire pieces at once. Going back to the idea of expanding STM through chunking, it becomes apparent that we learn/memorize music in chunks. A beginner may initially read individual pitches in a melody, but once he sees that the five pitches are a 5-finger pattern, that becomes a chunk instead of 5 individual units of STM, and it’s easier to learn and memorize.
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Read More »If you are at a technical level to be able to play the Beethoven Waldstein, then you don’t have to read each of the opening C major chords separately as individual units, each one occupying one of the 7 (+ or -2) units in STM. You see a much larger chunk of 7 beats leading to another chunk of 2 bars of G major chords. ( “Chunk” and “chunking” are such clunky terms to be applying to music, but sorry to say, I can’t change the accepted terminology. ) As you learn the piece, you combine smaller chunks into increasingly larger ones: phrases, sections, the exposition, the exposition plus development, eventually the entire movement. Not everyone will encode the elements of a piece in the same way. There are no right or wrong chunks, although musically, some chunks make a lot more sense than others and help to reinforce learning. Chunking by the bar won’t be as conducive to learning the piece as will chunking harmonically, rhythmically, and melodically. But the way any two pianists “chunk” a piece of music won’t necessarily be the same. And I don’t know any pianist who would sit down and say: “OK, I am going to learn this chunk , and then that one.” It’s a more intuitive process. We look for patterns, relationships, harmonic progressions, rhythmic motifs. We don’t think “chunks,” although in brain terminology, that’s what they are. In the excerpt from the Bach Italian Concerto below, one pianist may see the octave F interval and subsequent scalar passage to C as one chunk (outlines an F major scale plus a 5th), while another may see the following chords leading back to F as part of that same chunk. One may analyze the chords in the first two bars of the L.H. and think of them as one harmonic progression, another may be more attuned to the tenor line in those same two bars as a melody “chunk.” But how we learn all those chunks of a piece, how we link them together, and how we encode them in our brains determines how successful we will be when we sit down to perform the piece from memory. So next time we’re going to talk about how the neural pathways for music are formed in the brain when we learn/memorize – how the encoding of musical information actually happens. And then in the following post, we’ll look at some ways to learn/memorize so that we can be sure that all of these “episodes” in the piece are firmly linked in our brain so that our explicit memory of the piece will unfold securely over time as we are performing.
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