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keystring it sounds great from doing it on your own! Good luck with your surgery and with re-learning this piece
ShiroKuro Well, the other day, I found the score, and I can play it because it's easy and the score is easy to read and I remember the music, but I definitely didn't have the piece in my fingers and it just felt like playing a piece I have listened to before but playing it for the first time.
I worked on Chopin Ballade 1 intensely for 1.5 years and then put it away for 6-7 years. When I pulled it back out, it was like I was reading it fresh (even the easy parts) and I was horrified, all that hard work gone! Thankfully it did start to recover from my long-term storage after the first try. I wonder if I had memorized if it would have stuck better.
Or I wonder if there's a big difference between learning something intensely as a child when your brain is still developing versus as an adult...
keystring I don't think I'd try to memorize the first note of a section, unless there was a really good reason to do so.
The idea is that you should be able to learn your piece in sections and be able to recall them standalone, to really solidify your memorization and confidence. Otherwise you start playing and are just relying on muscle memory to get you through the rest of the piece. If you have a memory glitch, you'd have to start from the beginning again and can't just recover from your last "save point" (to use a video game analogy ). Remembering the first notes of a section definitely helps me but you might have some other method to help you.