Pick one up.
Guitar, ukulele, and piano — three starter paths, one methodical approach. Built for beginners who want to actually learn, not just be told they are.
Five phases shape every path.
Every instrument moves through the same five phases, in the same order. No phase is skipped. The one most beginner courses skip — Rhythm — is why most beginners plateau. We don't.
Orientation
Meet the instrument. Learn to hold it, tune it, and be with it before you play a single note.
First Sounds
Deliberate, clean single notes. One string, one key, one sound at a time.
Rhythm
Pulse, subdivisions, and time. The phase most courses skip — and the one that separates stuck from fluent.
Chord Vocabulary
Six to eight foundational chords. Each one drilled against the clock until transitions are clean.
Repertoire
Real songs. The moment everything you've practised becomes something you can share with someone.
Three instruments. Same shape.
Start with whichever one lives in your house, or whichever one's been calling to you the longest. If you learn more than one, you'll notice how much the phases rhyme.
Guitar
Six strings. A lifetime of songs. Start here if you want to sit around a fire and lead the room.
- 1. Orientation4
- 2. First Sounds5
- 3. Rhythm5
- 4. Chord Vocabulary8
- 5. Repertoire5
Piano
Eighty-eight keys. The welcoming instrument. Every living room, every church, every stage has one.
- 1. Orientation4
- 2. First Sounds5
- 3. Rhythm5
- 4. Chord Vocabulary6
- 5. Repertoire5
Ukulele
Four strings. Friendliest instrument there is. You'll be strumming a real song this week.
- 1. Orientation4
- 2. First Sounds5
- 3. Rhythm5
- 4. Chord Vocabulary6
- 5. Repertoire5
Learning that respects you.
Methodical, not gimmicky.
No "play any song in ten minutes" promises. Every lesson respects that a musician is being formed, and that formation takes attention, rhythm, and time.
Body-first, always.
How you hold the instrument, how you sit, how you breathe — these come before chords. The body you bring to the instrument is the body you'll have for the rest of your life.
Theory, woven in.
Interactive chord diagrams, scale explorers, the circle of fifths — live inside the lessons where they help. No dry theory sections. Theory is a tool, not a subject.
Pointed somewhere.
Every lesson asks you to remember music is shared. You're not practising for yourself alone — you're learning a language that only matters when you speak it to someone.
You're doing the real work already.
Orientation is free. The rest of the path is for members. Start with whichever instrument calls you, and let the five phases do their work.
Pick your instrument