Nice work, you completed the listening challenge.

Most people can answer some of these questions, but not consistently. That gap is completely normal, and it’s exactly what we train.

What This Reveals

Being able to clearly hear what’s happening in music is not automatic. It’s a skill.

In particular, most people haven’t learned how to focus on one sound at a time inside a full mix.

We call this “pointing your ear”: intentionally locking onto a single instrument and following it as the music continues.

Why This Matters

When you can hear individual layers in music, everything changes.

Songs feel richer. You notice details you never heard before. Listening becomes more active and engaging instead of something that fades into the background.

This skill is enjoyable on its own, even if you never touch an instrument.

A Different Starting Point

Reading music and performance are powerful, but real musical progress starts with hearing clearly.

Many approaches jump straight into notes, positions, or technique before you can actually hear what’s going on.

This training flips that: listening comes first.

What We Practice

In the beginning, we focus on one core ability:

Following a single sound in real music

You’ll learn how to:

  • lock onto one instrument

  • stay with it as the music continues

  • shift your attention between layers

This is the foundation for everything else, but it’s also a complete and satisfying skill by itself.

Try It Live

The next step is a live, interactive session.

In this small group session, you’ll experience how to point your ear in real time, using guided listening with simple musical examples.

Sessions are limited to 12 participants so everyone can stay engaged. Feel free to ask questions and share what your goals and challenges are.

Choose a time and book your spot below.