Everything a student needs to practice smarter, dig deeper, and develop taste — curated from years of teaching and playing.
The right tools make practice sessions more focused and more fun. These are what I recommend to my students.
Clean, reliable, and free. Subdivisions, accent patterns, and a tap-tempo button make it perfect for drilling grooves at any speed.
Get itPairs with their wearable but the standalone app is excellent. Visual pulse display helps beginners who struggle to hear the click in a loud room.
Get itFast chromatic tuner that works for any instrument. The free version is all you need — accurate, quiet enough for studio use, and has a built-in chord library.
Get itOur own in-house ear training tool — interval recognition and chord ID exercises tuned to a groove-first curriculum. No account needed.
Open itFree on every Mac and iPad. Genuinely professional for a beginner home studio — loop library, drum machine, amp sims, and basic MIDI. Start here before spending money.
Get itThe most bang-for-buck DAW on the planet. Runs indefinitely on free trial and costs $60 when you're ready to pay. I record my own music in Reaper — it punches way above its price tag.
Get itYou don't need to read sheet music to understand harmony, rhythm, and form — but having a map helps. These resources are practical, not academic.
The classic free theory tutorial site. Covers everything from reading notes to seventh chords in a logical, self-paced sequence. I recommend this to every beginner who wants a solid foundation.
Open itFree to audit. Berklee's intro music theory course is thorough and practical, taught by working musicians. No fluff — straight to application.
Audit freeInteractive exercises for scales, intervals, chords, and ear training. Pairs well with musictheory.net — use one to read concepts, the other to drill them.
Open itA physical tool that demystifies key relationships and chord progressions in seconds. Not free, but under $15 and worth every penny — I keep mine on my desk.
Find itOur own fretboard scale explorer — every scale, every key, on every instrument. Built specifically for Professor of Funk students to use alongside lessons.
Open itThese records rewired my brain. If you want to understand groove, feel, and musicianship, start here — then keep going.
Three things I find myself teaching in almost every lesson — regardless of instrument.
Every genre has a "one" — the first beat of the bar, the point of arrival that the whole groove circles around. In funk and R&B, the one is sacred. Whatever else you do, land there. Not close to there. There.
When I hear a student rushing or dragging, I don't tell them to slow down or speed up. I tell them to find the one and hold onto it like it's the only thing keeping the music alive — because it is. Start with just a single bar, loop it at a crawl, and feel where beat one wants to live. Everything else gets easier once you've got that.
Most students practice the notes they're supposed to play. The great musicians practice the silence in between. Your rests are as musical as your notes — they're where the listener breathes, where the groove breathes, where tension builds.
Try this: take a riff you know well and delete half the notes. Play it. Does it still groove? It usually grooves harder, because you've given the music room to exhale. You can always add notes back, but you can't buy space back once you've filled it.
I know, I know — nobody likes hearing themselves back. But your ears lie to you in real time. You think you're in the pocket because you feel like you're in the pocket. The recording is the truth.
You don't need fancy gear. Voice memos on your phone, one microphone pointed at the room — just capture it. Listen back at the end of practice, not to judge yourself, but to notice one thing you want to change next time. One thing. That's it. Do that every week for six months and you will not recognize your playing.
Resources can get you started, but there's no substitute for a teacher who can watch your hands and tell you exactly what's off. First lesson is free — no pressure, no obligation.
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