Highland bagpipes are certainly one of the loudest instruments you may find; yes, this instrument cannot vary in volume; there is no playing pianissimo or crescendo, just fortissimo, and yet the musicality is still there when played well. As a performance instrument, bagpipes are also always performed with music memorized. So how does one go about memorizing multiple tunes? Is it as simple as playing the tunes over and over again? No. Whether performing solo or with a band (especially with a band!) one needs to play the notes and embellishments as written. One reality that I’ve found is that not everyone memorizes as easily as another. I have to work hard to memorize a piece. Here’s what I found helps and works:
Practice the music – You’ve heard the music played somewhere and you like it! Before it can be memorized and performed a piper must be able to play the music correctly and with proper embellishments. So just start by playing the piece on the chanter. Play it slowly, and correctly with embellishments, until you have the notes played with the grace note embellishments. Soon after, I recommend playing the music on the pipes in practice. This also helps later in transitioning from memorized tune of the chanter to memorized on the pipes.
Phrase recognition – Almost every pipe tune has sections, phrases or bars of music that repeat. It may be a starting or ending theme in a part of music. Recognizing these phrases is key to memorization and helps a piper to better understand the music. Phrases may be from two to four measures of music. Some instructors encourage using highlighters of different colors to show any repetition. This may help inputting the tune together in your head.
Start with the end in mind – Pipers often notice that the ending phrase is one of the most repeated in a tune. Start memorizing these phrases. It will build your confidence in working on other phrases. Tying other phrases into the ending phrase will come easier as you practice tying them together.
Bagpipe music is often composed of two or four parts. As I start memorizing, I break each part of the tune into lines of music and then phrases within each line. As you memorize, you’ll recognize in yourself how your mind works and how long each phrase to be memorized can be. Phrases may be shorter if the complexity of the tune is greater, or conversely longer is the tune’s complexity is easier or that the tune is more singable.
Sing the tune in your head as you learn the tune on the chanter or bagpipes. This allows you to reinforce the memorization. Then when you play the tune, sing the song in your head as you build muscle memory.
Build phrases into parts – Play what you can from memory. Then go back and review the music for what you played correctly and what you didn’t. Memorizing tunes is both humbling and honest work. It’s one exercise where we can’t cheat. For me, it’s just plain hard work. Even while continuing to play a piece of music, building each phrase into a line, then into a part, then into a tune. I use my smart phone to record these memorized phrases, then play them back while I read the music. Great for self correcting.
Keep playing the parts you know adding to them, building each phrase. Envision each line or phrase or part, or repeated part with pick-up notes until you are playing it well. I like to alternate playing a phrase or part by memory then play it the next time with the sheet music. This reinforces playing both the notes and the musicality correctly. Combine that with recording and playback review with music.
Another tried and true technique for memorizing is to do it from the last phrase of a part backward. Take the last phrase, add the next to the last to it and so on. Keep doing this until you have the part memorized. Continue this until the whole tune is memorized.
As I work to memorize, I tap my foot to establish the tune’s tempo and use a metronome to aid in forcing me to memorize to a proper beat. I encourage using the metronome while recording playing as you will soon hear where you are off the beat or are rushing a phrase on run down the scale.
After all that hard work, knowing you’ve mastered a tune, play with all your heart and mind to bless others with your music. Be that at a memorial service, a wedding or a party your practice will pay off in the confidence you have in mastering a beautiful and unique instrument.
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