It's Time To Put Your Music Learning On "Fast Forward".
Fast Forward
Discover how "talented" musicians learn 10x faster than everyone else - and how you can too. 
Have you ever noticed how some musicians learn faster than others?
Much faster...

But did you know that their rapid progress does not come from having “talent” or “a gift” for music?

(and it doesn’t come from naturally “being a fast learner” or “having a good memory” either...)

It turns out there’s just one big difference between the average struggling hobbyist and the apparently-talented musicians.

You know the ones...

The musicians who:
  • Quickly master instrument technique,
  • Learn and memorise new music fast,
  • Can step into any performance situation with rock-solid confidence - and play flawlessly.
What is the one difference between these "talented" musicians... and the forever-struggling hobbyist?
Here at Musical U we’ve worked with thousands upon thousands of music learners.

Guitarists, pianists, saxophone players, trumpeters, violinists - pretty much every instrument…

Playing pop, rock, jazz, blues, gospel - and even new niche subgenres that nobody’s even heard of yet…

From first-week beginners through to seasoned veterans and top professionals...

And when it comes to music practice, they all say the same thing...

(does this describe your music practice too?)
 I try to do at least 30 minutes every day... but it doesn’t always happen. 

I spend some time on each of the areas my teacher told me to work on…

I have been getting better, I guess.

But it seems reeeaaally slow…

And sometimes even when I am practicing hard every day I just don’t get the results. 

I’m not sure why. 

Sometimes it even feels like I’m getting worse!

(Then, even when I do seem to crack it in the practice room - performing live without making mistakes is a whole other challenge…)

So... I tend to have spurts of enthusiasm - but then get bored or frustrated or overwhelmed and take a break for a while.

I’ve accepted that I’m not really talented... 

But I guess I stick with it because I love it so much.”

If you have experienced this kind of thing in music: it’s not your fault.

You see, everything we’re told about “good practice habits” is well-intentioned - but only ever produces mediocre results.

The way we’ve been taught to practice can only produce the kind of slow, unpredictable results that you are probably used to.

Many music learners even come to believe it's all they're capable of.
But when you look at the musicians who learn super fast…
  • They aren’t just putting in endless hours of brute-force drudgework.
  • They don’t have an insane near-robotic level of discipline.
  • And they’re not benefitting from any kind of magical “gift”.
Learn Music Fast
They are PRACTICING in a fundamentally different way to everyone else.
What if there was a way for you to practice in the same way?

What if you could learn dramatically faster, and see clear, measurable progress from every practice session?

What if you could improve more in one week... than you normally do in ten?

What if intense discipline and supreme organisational skills were completely unnecessary - because you naturally showed up to every practice session enthusiastically, knowing exactly what to spend each minute on for maximum results?

Over the last 30 years scientists have studied the experts in every field who have learned faster and achieved greater success than everyone else.

And the research conclusions are clear:
Scientists
There are specific techniques “expert learners” use Which are completely unknown to 99% of people.
These techniques are well proven and well documented - but they’ve been hidden away in scientific literature and described in ways that leave the average music learner thinking “Well that sounds clever - but how can I actually use it?!”

Here at Musical U we wanted to bring these techniques into the hands of the everyday music learner so they could experience the same ultra-fast learning and breakthroughs-on-demand that the science shows is possible.
That’s why we’ve collaborated with “The Learning Coach” Gregg Goodhart.

Gregg has spent over a decade studying all the theoretical findings, and then actually applying it with music students and musicians all around the world - and the results are incredible.
Gregg Goodhart
Now for the first time you can get access to step-by-step training on how to apply these breakthrough methods and start experiencing super-fast learning for yourself, with Musical Superlearning:
Praise for Gregg's superlearning training:
"AWESOME."
— Jenny S., Musical Superlearning student
"This new system allows me use my limited time to practice more profitably."
— Ed B., Musical Superlearning student
"Extremely useful and valuable."
— Joe R., Musical Superlearning student
Let me ask you…
Do you find it hard to keep up a consistent practice habit?

Do you ever feel disappointed or frustrated by how slowly you seem to learn?

Do you ever feel like your brain and fingers just don’t work as quickly as you need them to?

Do you find your concentration wandering during music practice?

Do you wish you could eliminate mistakes and play with fluid grace?

Do you struggle to get new pieces up to tempo, even though you can play them slowly?

Do you find you have “plateaued” at an intermediate level on your instrument, no matter what you try?

Do you find your motivation for music practice fluctuating from day to day?

Do you constantly seek new methods, tutorials, courses and teachers, hoping for a new insight that will make it easier to improve on your instrument?

Do you sometimes feel like you might just be wasting your time during practice?

Discover The 8 Music-Learning Myths
That Keep You “Stuck In First Gear”

Faced with all of these challenges and frustrations, most musicians (from beginner hobbyist through to seasoned pro) draw a simple conclusion:
“I’m not talented. If I want to get good it will be a long, hard, painful grind.”
That’s an understandable conclusion.

If you’re putting in the practice time and you’re working hard, but you’re not seeing results - it must be you.

You just don’t have what it takes.

Seems obvious, right?

Wrong.

There is a single root cause of every one of the problem above, and it has nothing to do with innate abilities or some mystical thing called “talent”.

And even the most devoted music learners - the ones who choose to believe they are actually capable of more - are seeking solutions to these problems in all the wrong places...
Musicians around the world are still being taught 8 major myths that keep their music learning “stuck in first gear”.
See if any of these are familiar:

The 8 Myths Of Music Learning

  • Musical ability is innate. Some people have more “talent” than others. 
  • You need to spend at least 30 minutes (or 60 minutes or 4 hours or ???) every day to make progress. 
  • When your progress stalls and you hit a “plateau”, you’ve either got to be patient and keep pushing forwards in the same way. Or accept you’ve just reached your natural limits. 
  • If you can’t keep up a consistent practice habit, your life is too busy or you need to have more discipline. 
  • The goal of music practice is to eliminate mistakes - the fewer the better.
  • Some people have a “bad memory” or are “slow learners”. 
  • There are so many things to learn in music, so you need to be extremely organised.
  • ​Learning music is hard work.
If you believe any one of these myths then you’ll want to read this entire page. 

Because until you discover the truth about each of these, you will never come close to your true learning potential.
We’ll return to these myths a bit later on...

First we need to look at three “red herrings” that devoted musicians who want to learn faster are wasting huge amounts of time and energy trying to fix.

Is It The “When”?

The biggest complaint among musicians of all kinds is time.
“I can’t find time for music practice.”

“If only I could keep up a consistent practice habit...”

“I could improve faster if I could just set aside proper daily time for practice.”
The curse of time
Although it seems like having more time (or being more consistent about setting time aside) for music practice is the solution, this is an illusion.

When we surveyed 750+ musicians of all backgrounds and ability levels, including semi-pro and professional players, it turned out that no matter how much time musicians have for practice, they always feel like they don’t have enough.

And they always feel disappointed in the progress they manage to make in that time.

So the secret to super-fast music learning is not about the “WHEN”.
You can learn music super-fast with as little as 15 minutes per day, 5 days a week.

Is It The “What”?

“Okay,” you might think, “if it’s not about having more time for practice then it must be about practicing exactly the right things every practice session.”

Makes sense.

And actually one of the biggest causes of that “never enough time” feeling is a lack of clarity about what to spend that practice time on.

So we go looking for a new explainer video... a new course… a new list of practice tips that we hope will make the difference.

Constantly chasing “shiny objects” can temporarily give us the feeling of progress - but leads to information overload and practice overwhelm, leaving us more frustrated and confused than ever.
Shiny Object Overwhelm
The reality is that however much you seek out the “perfect practice plan”, no plan will never deliver the results you hope for.

If the “perfect practice plan“ could really solve all our problems - then surely in this internet age every music learner would all have discovered and downloaded that perfect plan and we would all be virtuosos by now?

Yes, of course it is better to be organised than disorganised.

And of course it is good to include all the important areas in your practice.

But these things only move you from “no progress” to “a bit of progress”.

If you want to go from “a bit of progress” to “ultra-fast learning”, it’s going to take something more than having a good practice routine. 

The secret to super-fast music learning is not about the “WHAT”.
You can learn music super-fast with any practice plan you choose.

Is It The “Who”?

“Alright,” you might be thinking, “so if having the perfect plan and unlimited time is not enough, what does it take? If you still couldn’t learn music super-fast with the “when” and the “what” taken care of…”

Well, then it must be down to you, right?

If you have a “bad memory”, or you’re “not a fast learner” or you have “slow, fumbling fingers” - what hope can there be?

For many music learners it seems as if there are just fundamental biological or genetic characteristics which keep them from learning fast.
Self doubt
Some kind of “you’ve got it or you don’t” traits that determine if it will be easy for you to become a great musician or not.

But ask yourself this: if that were true - surely science would have found these special traits by now?

We would see research study after research study all saying something like:
“The best musicians are those who have high intelligence, a strong, reliable memory and unusually high levels of dexterity.”
But look at the scientific research going back decades - and you won’t find a single validated study which says anything like that.

In spite of everything society and television would have us believe about “talent” in music, the facts are clear: the very best musicians are not bizarre freaks of nature, gifted with physical and neurological abilities beyond those of mere mortals.

Biologically they are exactly the same as every other human being.

If you want to improve ultra-fast, and achieve the same heights of musical abilities that they have, it’s entirely possible for you too. 

So the secret to super-fast music learning is not about the “WHO”.
You can learn super-fast, no matter who you are and no matter what your natural abilities might be.

It’s All About The...

So if it’s not a matter of “What”, “When” or “Who” - what does it take to learn music super-fast?

If it’s really possible to see rapid progress in just 15 minutes per day, regardless of what you choose to work on, or what natural abilities you were born with… 

… by this point you’re probably wondering “How?”

And that’s exactly the right question to ask.

You see...
The secret to super-fast music learning is all in the “HOW” of practice.




Learning Music Is Not Like Learning Other Things.

As adult learners we need to be aware of a common but disastrous mistake:
Thinking that we can learn music the way we learn other things.
We’re used to reading books or newspapers and learning facts, effortlessly.

We’re used to expanding our work skillset on-the-fly, adapting to new challenges in our job without needing to think much about it or consider doing any “practice”.

We’re used to watching a YouTube tutorial on something like bike repair or home improvement, and being able to go away and apply that new knowledge in a reasonably competent way, right away.
Learning music is different
Music is different.
Developing your musical abilities requires a fundamentally different kind of learning. 

And that’s why when we simply show up for practice and bash our head against the practice plan we laid out, we rarely see any real progress.

You see...

However many music lessons we’ve had, and however much music information we’ve been taught -
We’ve never actually been taught how to learn musical skills.
And as long as you are trying to learn musical skills the same way you learn most other things, you’re following a recipe for mediocre results and continuous disappointment.

But when you discover how music learning is really meant to work…

Everything changes.
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Meet Gregg.

“I’ve been playing some type of instrument or another most of my life. 
When I was 10 I already knew I wanted to be a musician. All the cool kids were into the Beatles and I started learning to play the drums. 

By the time I was 12 I had moved on to guitar. I started playing in several bands but as a self-taught rock guitar player I had to struggle, and it took forever to figure out the music theory, memorize all the key signatures and all that. 

But I loved it so much that I just never got away from it. 
Gregg Goodhart
I tried so many wrong ways to get better that I probably should have quit! But I have an unusual amount of grit: even when I should quit, I don’t. Luckily in music I ended up finding out that, hey, if you don’t quit you eventually get there. 

I remember it was always frustrating that I could play things slowly, but I couldn’t figure out why I couldn’t play them faster. 

When I tried to play them faster, they fell apart. 

My reasoning at the time was, "well, I can walk or run. I can choose to do either. So if I can play it slow, I should be able to play it fast, right?"
I tried everything. 
And I just could not figure out how to get past that barrier. 

I also had what I think is a very common experience: that is no matter how much I worked in practice, when I got on stage I would make a number of mistakes that was unacceptable. You know no one would pay for that...

It might have even been 95% correct! But the 5% that went wrong - they were always the parts I’d worked on like crazy because I knew those sections were hard. They just didn’t work in concert. 
Gregg Goodhart
And then I’d walk off stage really disappointed about the 5%... because we all know full well that despite everyone telling us that we’re great, we’re wonderful and everyone enjoyed it, we know full well that no one would pay for a concert ticket to see that. 
In music, 95% is simply not good enough.
And it is good to have that "100% perfect" ideal in our mind. 

But it creates this big hump. 

I knew what I wanted to express musically... but it's really hard to express yourself if your technique doesn’t work. Your fingers get in the way between your head and your heart and your instrument and you have to train them. 
Still, I persisted. 
I moved on to classical guitar and even got a master’s degree in performance playing this way. A lot of people do. 

I was good enough that even though I saw players better than me and wished I could do better, I accepted that I should be satisfied with at least being better than most people... And that at least got me some recognition.
Gregg Goodhart
But I will tell you I was always internally disappointed. I kept working towards performances or recording, and it never worked the way I wanted.  

I was very disappointed in my playing well up into my teaching years.
And then this is where it gets interesting...
As a teacher I started to get scared, because I started to get my kids as far as "good" but realized I didn’t know how to get them better. 

I said, “What’s going to happen when one of these kids gets to the point where I need to start getting their scales up to serious, serious levels, start getting their playing up into virtuoso levels?” 

I didn’t know how to do that. 

And for some reason I just knew that I could do it - but I didn’t know how.
Gregg Teaching
That’s what started my journey of discovering the true methods of fast music learning.
I became curious about this idea of "talent" - and what I could do to nurture any potential "talent" in my students.

And what I discovered shocked me.

It turned out that the scientists knew things about "talent" that nobody was talking about...

In the research world, it was abundantly clear: 
Talent didn't seem to exist.
At least, not in anything like the way we’d all been led to believe. The science showed clearly that “talent”, if it exists at all, does not seem to matter in how much skill you can develop. And it is not something that one person can have and another can’t get, with about the same amount of work. 

But it got even more fascinating from there...

Because the scientists didn't just prove that talent was a myth.

They had also figured out what was going on when somebody achieved world-class abilities and seemed to learn dramatically faster than normal.
There were all these methods and techniques that explained how some people learned super-fast and others didn’t.
The more I read, the more excited I got.

I started trying some of these things out... 

First in my own practice, and then with my students.
And it worked.
Gregg Goodhart
That “barrier” of not being able to get things fast enough? 

Gone.

I could quickly learn to play any section at full tempo, no problem.

The “hump” of live performance only ever being 95% right? 

Gone.

I found that when I fixed my practice, I could step on stage and confidently play at 100%, every time.

My ideas about what I was capable of as a musician quickly began to shift...
These theoretical ideas from the research science actually produced some serious results.
Gregg Goodhart
Every day I was seeing my students leap forwards in their instrument skills.

They would blow through pieces that had been troubling them for months.
They were suddenly playing with an accuracy and consistency that you would never expect from kids that age - except when they were one of those so-called “prodigies”.
Now I knew exactly where those apparent “prodigies” were coming from. 
It wasn’t magic or anything mysterious.

They just knew how to practice.

The more I studied the science, the more I tried it with my students, the more astonished I became that 99% of the world was still stuck in the same-old ways of practice.
Gregg Goodhart
That endless “play and pray” where you just keep doing the same thing and hope you get better… what a waste of time!
Gregg Goodhart
When other teachers saw the results my students were getting, they wanted to know how it was possible.

So I started teaching the teachers. 

Soon I was travelling all over the country talking in high schools and universities, sharing these “secrets” that had been hiding in plain sight in the scientific literature.
I became known as “The Learning Coach” and I found that world-class musicians were seeking me out for 1-to-1 training to help them reach new heights after being “plateaued” for years.
Perhaps the most incredible thing was this: the exact same techniques I used to make 8-year old beginners seem like prodigies also helped the musicians already considered virtuosos to reach even greater heights.
Now, I never claim to have invented the underlying concepts of super-fast learning... 

But over the last 10 years I have probably spent more time than anybody else on the planet studying these ideas and figuring out how to put them to use for the task of learning music.
Gregg Presenting
And now it’s my life’s mission to get these techniques into the hands of every musician and music learner in the world.
Because once you know how to actually use all these powerful techniques, there’s no more need for “head bashing”. 

There’s no more guilt and disappointment over not being “good enough”. 

There’s no more “slow learners” or “slow fingers”. 

And that “falling apart in performance” that had always driven me crazy? That disappears practically overnight too.
When you discover the secrets behind how “prodigies” are made and how some musicians just seem “talented”...

... are in fact all practical techniques that you too can use...

You realise it’s entirely realistic that you too could be a “talented prodigy” - and fast.
Learning music will never be the same again.
Zane H.
"Gregg is great - bridging a true gap. Very easy to see results in a matter of minutes."
— Zane H., Musical Superlearning student
Bob G
"Gregg is an awesome observer, communicator and teacher with the key to unlock our learning potential and success."
— Bob G., Musical Superlearning student
Ashley S.
" I was blown away by the difference! Greg is brilliant."
— Ashley M., Musical Superlearning student
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It’s Myth-Busting Time.

Let’s return to those "8 Major Myths That Keep Your Music Learning “Stuck In First Gear” and see what’s really going on...

MYTH #1

“Musical ability is innate. Some people have more ‘talent’ than others.”

MYTH #2

“You need to spend at least 30 minutes (or 60 minutes or 4 hours or ???) every day to make progress.”

MYTH #3

“When your progress stalls and you hit a ‘plateau’, you’ve either got to be patient and keep pushing forwards in the same way. Or accept you’ve just reached your natural limits.”

MYTH #4

“If you can’t keep up a consistent practice habit, your life is too busy or you need to have more discipline.”

MYTH #5

“The goal of music practice is to eliminate mistakes - the fewer the better.”

MYTH #6

“Some people have a ‘bad memory’ or are ‘slow learners’.” 

MYTH #7

“There are so many things to learn in music, so you need to be extremely organised.”

MYTH #8

“Learning music is hard work.” 

 The Bottom Line Is...

It doesn't matter what instrument or style of music you play, what level you've reached so far, how much time you can practice for, how you spend that practice time, or how much natural ability you have…

Until You Fix The HOW Of Practice You Will:

  • Never have enough time because you're wasting whatever time you do have
  • Experience slow, unpredictable and inconsistent progress because you’re applying practice methods that aren’t suitable for the type of learning you’re actually trying to do
  • Be prone to blaming yourself, and feeling lazy, frustrated and disappointed because however hard you try, you just won’t get the results you want or deserve
  • ​Constantly be seeking out something new that you hope will give you a little burst of progress and refresh your enthusiasm (a.k.a. “shiny object syndrome”) because you haven’t yet learned the reliable and sustainable ways to produce fast and consistent progress in your music practice.
  • ​Find your motivation and enthusiasm fading over time, perhaps even to the point of wanting to give up completely because let’s face it: it’s no fun to feel like you’re failing, especially at something you really love and want to be good at.
Make one decision now to fix the “How” - and you never need to suffer these challenges again.

Fix The “How” And...

  • Continual improvement becomes normal: your improvement is predictable, consistent, and faster than you ever thought possible.
  • Mistakes are no longer the enemy: tricky sections become “grist for your mill” which actually accelerate your progress.
  • You continually reach new levels of technique and mastery. The kind of “plateaus” that previously might have had you stuck for months (or even permanently) are a thing of the past.
  • Motivation and discipline are something you don’t even need to think about. Your enthusiasm for practice is naturally unlimited, matching your passion for the music itself.
  • iThe divide between practicing and performing fades away. You discover that there’s no need for performance anxiety when every piece you’ll perform feels like child’s play to you.
  • ​Your whole musical identity shifts as you realise you are not subject to inherent limitations or a set of natural caps on your ability - but in fact are capable of reaching any level you dream of in music.

So How Do You Fix The “How”?

What does it look like to transform music practice from a dull, endless, unproductive grind into a thing of joy, and continual improvement?

How exactly do you “learn how to learn” in music?

Science has the answers.

But these secrets of super-fast learning haven’t yet made it into the hands of the average music teacher or student.

Until now...
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Musical Superlearning

A 4-Week Online Training Course Developed In Collaboration With “The Learning Coach” Gregg Goodhart, Designed To Empower Any Music Learner To Dramatically And Permanently Accelerate Their Learning.

For the first time you can learn exactly the same tools and techniques used by the world’s fastest music learners and most expert musicians, and discover a speed and ease of learning you’ve never thought possible...

In this unique 4-week course Gregg Goodhart, the world’s top expert on applying the science of accelerated learning to music, will teach and guide you step-by-step through mastering the most powerful and transformative practice techniques.

Using a special adaptation of Musical U’s proven “Learn/Practice/Apply” framework for online music learning, each week you will:
  • Learn the powerful concepts underlying the techniques you’ll be using so you know how and why they work.
  • Practice using new high-impact techniques with specific guided exercises.
  • Apply your new practice techniques to real practice tasks from your own music learning.
In just four weeks you’ll experience nothing less than complete transformation in your music practice and the results you get.

And of course, as you would expect from a course created by the leading providers of musicality training online and the world’s top expert on high-efficiency learning in music:
This is not going to be a painful grind for four weeks!
This course is designed to be fun, easy and convenient - and specifically intended for people who don’t have a lot of time and may have struggled to keep up a music practice habit.

You’ll find yourself moving through the material easily, smoothly and with great delight as you see the results quickly start to manifest in your musical life.
 Secure Checkout. Prices in US Dollars. 100% Satisfaction Money-Back Guarantee.
 Here’s what’s waiting for you
in Musical Superlearning...

Week 1: Take The Shortcut Straight To Success

Some courses leave “the good stuff” right until the end - because often the most powerful techniques need a bit of lead-up.

Not in this course.

We’re kicking off with the technique Gregg describes as being like “steroids for music learning - with none of the negative side effects”:
Contextual Interference.
The concept is simple - in fact, you’ve already encountered it earlier on this page when talking about Myth #3 and breaking through plateaus.

We think that the fastest route from A to B is a straight line. 

But if your speed along that straight line is constantly decreasing, should you really just continue on in the same way?
Diminishing returns
That’s exactly what we tend to do in music learning, and that’s why contextual interference is so critically important.

When you apply the techniques of contextual interference you deliberately make your chosen task harder on yourself - but in a very intentional and carefully-chosen way. 

By pushing your brain in a different direction, you force it back into high-efficiency learning mode - and when you return to that normal “straight line” path to the goal, you’re suddenly back to moving at full speed.
With contextual interference
Simple idea, right? 

But it’s not so simple to know how to use it effectively, and in a way that doesn’t produce “diminishing returns” over time...
In Week 1 we’re diving straight in to mastering contextual interference, the tool which can "reset the power law of learning" and get you back to making fast progress in any situation. This will be like taking a shortcut to success because you’ll see big results in your music learning right away.
Including:
  • The truth about music practice, and why simply “putting in the reps” is a recipe for disaster.
  • What most people don’t realise is actually happening in our brain when we learn a new skill - and what that means for your music learning.
  • The reason music is fundamentally different to almost every other topic or skill you might try to learn as an adult.
  • ​How to use contextual interference, the single most effective practice technique (described as “steroids for music-learning”) with endless variations that make it 100% reliable.
  • ​The strange idea of “desirable difficulty” which underpins the powerful “contextual interference” technique. (When you master this, you can create your own “powertools” of learning on-the-fly.)
  • ​How to break through any “plateau” in your progress and consistently see clear, measurable progress. Week after week... Month after month... Year after year...
  • ​21 powerful tools you can use to master tricky sections and quickly get any passage up to full tempo.
  • ​What never to do with “tricky sections” in the music you’re learning to play (even though it seems like a good idea).
  • ​The neurological reason you sometimes seem to get worse during a practice session - and the bizarre solution that fixes it in 30 seconds (with literally zero extra effort).

Week 2: Discover The Masterkey To Accelerated Learning

If there’s one discovery from the last 30 years of scientific research on how the brain learns which stands out above all the rest it’s:
Deliberate Practice
Simple name. 

Deep concept.

Some musicians who have come across this idea have distilled it down to this:
“Instead of spending your practice time practicing everything,
instead practice only the most challenging sections or skills.”
Meaning: focus your effort on where it’s needed most.

Now that is a powerful idea in itself…

But deliberate practice goes much further and deeper than that simple starting point.

There is one easy way to understand deliberate practice. Watch Gregg explain deliberate practice in a nutshell here:
Have you been wasting your time doing just the “Plan” and “Do” steps repeatedly?

Until you introduce the missing “Reflect” step, you’ll always be wasting the majority of your practice time.

Like all these techniques, it takes only a few minutes to “get the idea” - but it takes more than that before you actually see any impact.
In Week 2 we’re going deep on deliberate practice, showing you exactly what it looks like when it’s applied, how it relates to the “contextual interference” technique you learned in Week 1, and the various ways you can use deliberate practice to get better, faster results in a fraction of the time.
Including:
  • How to improve more in 10-15 minutes per day than you ever dreamed possible. This is a permanent game-changer for your future as a musician.
  • What you should be spending your practice time on. (Hint: It’s not the “laundry list” of tasks you’ve probably been taught makes for a “good practice routine”)
  • The 5 warning signs to look out for which signal your practice time is not being well spent - and the reliable “quick fix” solution to each.
  • The one thing that’s better than having the world’s best teacher. Until you get this, the efforts of even the best teacher will be wasted on you. But once you get it, you’ll make faster progress with any teacher, course or method.
  • An end to seeking the “perfect practice plan”. Once you discover how to guide your own practice minute-by-minute for maximum learning, you’ll realise that any fixed “practice plan” is simply a recipe for wasting time.
  • What you must do in every practice session if you want to come away feeling a clear sense of measurable progress.
  • What common practice advice you should never take (if you want to actually get results).

Week 3: Develop Your Elephant-Shaped Sponge

Is there anything more frustrating than spending time and effort to learn something - only to find that days or weeks later, you’ve lost it again?

Well, maybe there is one thing more frustrating: when it feels like a Herculean struggle to learn or memorise it in the first place!

Whether it’s songs and pieces you’re trying to get “off book”, the fingering patterns you’re meant to use, the sharps and flats in key signatures, your set list for tomorrow night, or anything else - almost every musician feels like this one thing puts a hard limit to their capabilities:
Memory.
At the same time, you’ve probably encountered people who have a “head for facts and figures” or a “photographic memory”. 

They seem to soak up information and knowledge like a sponge, then retain it like an elephant (they never forget).

Ever wished you could have that same kind of “elephant-shaped sponge” for a brain?
Elephant-shaped sponge
(Side note: did you know memory problems are actually the underlying cause of 90% of performance anxiety and that all-too-common "but I played it better at home!" phenomenon too? Once you know you can rely on having a rock-solid memory those problems quietly fade away...)
In Week 3 we’ll be uncovering the practical processes and techniques used by the world’s top memory champions (people who literally compete internationally for who can memorise fastest) and the surprisingly easy things you can do to reinforce everything you learn and move it from “short term” to “long term” memory, to be summoned up with perfect recall any time you want it in future.
Including:
  • The “guerilla practice” technique that lets you make fast progress even if you can never sit down for a 20-minute practice session.
  • The four innovative time-management strategies you can find to unlock hidden “music time” throughout your weekly schedule.
  • The secrets to having a “super memory”, able to learn new music fast, retain it long-term and recall it reliably, regardless of whether you ever thought you had a “good memory”.
  • Just like learning physical skills, when it comes to memory brute-force repetition is not the solution: it’s the enemy. There are smarter approaches that let you develop rock-solid memories with a fraction of the time and effort.
  • The internal structures the brain uses to memorise - and how to turn these to your advantage to soak up new knowledge quickly and store it long-term.
  • Why it’s normal to struggle to remember something when returning to it after a break - and how knowing this will help you manage your memorising with maximum efficiency.
  • Visualisation methods for rapid memorisation. You won’t believe what your mind comes up with - and how it “short-circuits” the struggle of memorising large amounts of information fast.

Week 4: Become Your Own Greatest Ally

Whether you’ve been learning music for a day, a week, a year, a decade or all your life, one thing is for sure: you’ve experienced “negative self-talk” in your head before.

It might be a voice saying “Give up! You’ll never crack it.”

It might be a vague, nagging sense of frustration and disappointment.

It might be a feeling of guilt and shame (even anger?) when you make mistakes while playing.

Most of us just accept this as how our mind works, and go through life always feeling a bit “down on ourselves” for what we fail to achieve in our musical lives…

It is absolutely essential that you get this one thing working for you instead of against you:
Mindset.
Now you might be thinking that Week 4 must be about “postive thinking”...

"Let’s all just feel happy all the time!"

Nope.

It is critically important to overcome that negative self-talk and re-set your musical mindset.

But this goes way beyond mere positivity.

In fact, the most productive and effective mindset is more realistic and pragmatic than you’re probably used to - not less.
Master your mindset
Let’s face it...

There’s no point acquiring all these superlearning techniques if you still wake up in the morning and feel “I can’t be bothered”.

Or you get halfway through a practice session, lose motivation, and give up in frustration.

That's why now that you've learned the tools and techniques we'll wrap things up by making sure you will be able to really put them to maximal use.

That means showing you the hidden ways our brains can hold us back and trip us up - and equipping you with the research-backed ways to overcome each.
In Week 4 we’re going to look at what the science reveals about mindset. What are the beliefs and attitudes you can adopt and nurture in yourself which will actually have direct, practical benefits on your learning. And how can you tap into that special state of blissed-out ultra-learning called “flow”...
Including:
  • The mental alchemy that transforms challenges into opportunities, mistakes into progress-boosters, and critical feedback into a power supply.
  • What you must never think during music practice (this one thought can sabotage your learning entirely!)
  • The single mindset shift which can make all the difference between endless struggle and effortless mastery.
  • Better than discipline. Discover how a simple change in how you practice can mean you show up and pay attention every practice session - no self-discipline required.
  • The sneaky self-sabotaging thoughts to be on the look out for. Most music learners don’t even realise these are what’s holding them back from rapid results in their music practice.
  • The science of “flow”: why it produces such extreme learning progress while seeming so easy, and how you can tap into it on demand.
  • The hidden-in-plain-sight reason we experience performance anxiety - and how you can easily fix it long before you ever step up on stage.

In Just Four Weeks...

Your music practice will be almost unrecognisable - in the best possible way.

You will have experience using specific tools and techniques which you can continue to apply to speed up your learning AND you will have a deep understanding of the concepts underneath, so that you can go even further in future.

Your new knowledge and mindset will position you for ongoing success and even further acceleration of all your music learning.
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Robert D.
"This course is making me realize how much more focus I should put on the task itself as well as choosing the task to tackle. Wow!"
— Robert D., Musical Superlearning student
Sue T.
"I had practiced this piece over and over, making minimal progress. Today, after following the assigned exercises, I actually broke through my plateau, and am feeling optimistic! Onward!"
— Sue T., Musical Superlearning student
Gerry F.
"I’m applying this model to my jazz standards. [After using course exercises] I played it several times much better and at a much faster tempo. I was really pleased and gave me confidence in moving forward."
— Gerry F., Musical Superlearning student
Is Musical Superlearning Right For You?
If you can relate to any of the types of musician and have experienced any of the problems below then Musical Superlearning has been designed to help people like you.
Musical Superlearning Helps...
People Like This...
  • BEGINNER THROUGH TO PRO
    From excited hobbyists who have just started learning music, through to the committed player who's been learning for years, through to full professionals at the top of their game. Unless you're already using all the techniques taught in Musical Superlearning, you are learning at only a fraction of your true potential.
  • ALL INSTRUMENTS AND STYLES 
    The course is designed to work for any instrument and style of music. At Musical U we specialise in developing this kind of training, so you can be confident that whether you play guitar, piano, violin, sax, harmonica or mountain dulcimer - and whether you play rock, pop, jazz, classical, electronic or exclusively 90s Britpop cover songs, this course will work for you. You will be shown how to apply the techniques on your instrument and your music.
  • ALL ADULTS 
    Although these techniques can be extremely effective with young learners, it's important to note that Musical Superlearning has been created for use by adults only. Any age from 16 through to 90+ years of age are welcome and will be able to successfully use the course. You will probably find it easy to adapt for use with children if you wish - but please note this is not a supported use of the course.
With Things Like This...
  • LEARNING 
    Developing instrument technique quickly, playing increasingly challenging repertoire, learning the "book knowledge" such as notation and theory. Overcoming "slow" or "sloppy" fingers. Getting past "sticking points" easily.
  • MEMORISING 
    Committing new pieces to memory fast and retaining a large repertoire long-term. 
  • ​TIME 
    Keeping up a practice habit, finding time for music amid a busy life, making the most of the practice time you have.
  • MOTIVATION 
    Keeping your passion strong and ensuring you continually see clear, measurable progress so that you have no doubt you're improving.
  • CONFIDENCE 
    Overcoming performance anxiety and gaining the certainty you can perform at the peak of your abilities, no matter the situation.
  • REACHING YOUR FULL POTENTIAL 
    Break through any sticking point or "plateau" and continually reach new heights of musical ability. Banish self-doubt by proving to yourself that you are capable of great musicianship.
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Superlearning Case Studies
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"I was working myself into a frenzy over not practicing enough - but I wasn't fixing anything! "Play and pray", that was me."

"In 2-3 weeks my whole practice has changed, my outlook has changed - I can't stress enough how much of a change that has made for me. [...] This is the best thing I've ever done."

Andrea N.

Andrea began playing the piano at a young age, but didn’t stick to it through her primary years. After relocating following marriage, she suddenly found herself in demand as a piano teacher for the interested youths in her small town. While she was comfortable playing her level of music, she felt like she was coming short when trying to teach her students. 

Now an adult, she restarted her formal music education and began discovering the gaps in her own understanding of music and technical abilities. Andrea continued to push through the ABRSM examinations, learning to become a more confident and capable musician. The difficulty of the levels proved to be a roadblock as she lost confidence with mistakes. 

After just a few weeks, Andrea is feeling a level of confidence that she’s never had with her own playing. She’s able to work through the mistakes and see them as a positive opportunity for growth rather than something that must be corrected. While still several months from taking her next round of examinations, she has a new outlook and frame of mind about her own playing. She says the skills that she’s incorporated into her practice will continue to benefit her playing for years to come. 
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"I used to think that I didn't have enough time to practice. But by doing the things Gregg suggested, I got loads and loads more practice time - and made far more progress than I would have thought."

Mike M.

Mike is a lifelong guitar player who performed professionally for a number of years before starting his career as a music teacher. While he struggled at times during his early music education, he was able to develop enough skills to make a living playing music. Music has been a lifelong passion and continues to define his life. 

Interested in continuing to pick up new skills, Mike expanded his repertoire into several other instruments. He became increasingly interested in neuroscience and how the brain actually learns new skills. This search led him to studying with Gregg and beginning to adopt these methods into his own playing and teaching. 

Since learning these skills, Mike has noticed incredible improvement in his playing. Passages that had been unplayable for years are now coming with ease. Even though he can’t practice every day, he says his practice time has become more efficient, he’s able to learn new songs with less practice and within just a few weeks he was able to apply what he learned and finally accomplish some of his long-standing goals. Getting the practice “right” has made all the difference and he’s thrilled by his progress in such a short time. 
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"[Now my] practice is deliberate practice. I'm no longer just running through pieces. I'm actually having more fun because I'm taking a piece I'm working on and I am acting like a kid again, actually!"

Bob G.

Bob discovered classical guitar as an adult while walking through a public park in San Francisco, California and was immediately drawn to the instrument. After playing for a couple of years, he left his business career to study classical guitar at the local conservatory, but was taken aback by the lack of support in the studio as well as the cost to studying music. Guitar continued to be his passion, but he left school to return to work. 

Once the children began to leave the home, Bob was able to make music a bigger part of his life and pursued multiple online learning opportunities. He performed on occasion in his small town, continuing to refine his playing and growing as a musician. While he was happy with his progress, he felt that there was more he could accomplish. 

Bob used to just play through his pieces, but deliberate practice has really helped him to focus his practice and get more from each session. He’s having more fun and says that he “feels like a kid again” learning complex pieces of music. The added focus has made his practice more efficient and he’s able to accomplish more without feeling the overwhelm many experience when woodshedding a complex piece of music. He looks forward to years of continuing to grow. 
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"I couldn't find anybody who could help me break through those plateaus."

"It surprised me how quickly it took effect."

"I actually cut back on my practice time [...] because it became so clear where I was just repeating, and not in a productive way."

Nat H.

Nat is a professional musician who performs throughout the United States and Europe as part of his musical group in addition to teaching. He’s very accomplished in a variety of styles and continues to learn from some of the world’s top musicians. 

Like many musicians, Nat found that he was hitting plateaus and was unable to find a way to progress to the next level. He continued to study, trying new techniques and learning from master musicians, but nothing seemed to be helping him break through the limitations that he was feeling in his musical performances. 

Since studying with Gregg, Nat says he is better equipped to enter into the practice room with a greater focus on what he needs to do to accomplish his goals. The techniques that he’s learned have allowed him to get past the technical requirements of pieces of music and focus more on performing. He’s thrilled that everything he’s learned can be applied throughout his music for the rest of his life. After searching for years, Nat says he has finally found exactly what he needed. 
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"I was like, "I want to learn this fast." I did not want to waste any time with this."

"With these techniques, the practice time, kind of isn't an issue. I'm not shooting to practice for an hour or two hours (even though I often do because I'm having a good time). Now it's, "I want to accomplish this. And this is how I do it." And the amount of time that it actually takes to do this is a lot less."

Lynne G.

Lynne was always interested in playing music, but several experiences during her formative years caused her to stop playing. Teachers during those times weren’t as supportive as she needed them to be and there was some baggage that she carried with her for years, causing her to doubt her ability to play music. 

After getting back into music later in life, Lynne realized just how much she loved to play and wanted to make it a more permanent part of her life. She not only wanted to learn… she wanted to learn fast!

Since learning from Gregg, Lynne says her perception of practice has completely changed. She used to just play songs over and over again, hoping that she would make it through without mistakes. She now uses practice techniques that better train her brain to retrieve the skills she needs from long-term memory. Her repertoire has expanded greatly and she’s even begun performing with confidence to her group of friends. She says that her long-held dreams of playing the instrument have been realized. 

More Case Studies Below!

About the course provider: Musical U
Musical Superlearning is brought to you by Musical U, the world’s leading provider of musicality training online.

Musical U has over 10 years of experience helping adult music-learners of all kinds develop skills they'd always thought took "talent" and reach new heights of musical ability.
Musical U products and training material have been featured in leading websites and publications worldwide, including: 
Our flagship membership program is rated 4.8 out of 5 stars on public Google Reviews.
Google Reviews
Google Reviews
Leading Music Educators Are Saying:
David Andrew Wiebe
“The Musical U team is downright amazing. They have a great attitude and are always working hard to ensure their members are in the loop and making progress towards their goals. I'm not aware of any other community out there like it. Highly recommended!”
- David Andrew Wiebe
Music Entrepreneur HQ
Natalie Weber
“Musical U is one of the best, most devoted resources on the internet for musicians who are serious about growing their musical skills. I am constantly amazed at the depth of insight and the quality of resources that are available."
- Natalie Weber
Music Matters Blog
Leila Viss
"The guidance and content found at Musical U is outstanding for those seeking to find their musical voice as well as those who've found it and need support to further their skills and creativity."
- Leila Viss
88 Creative Keys
Glory St. Germain
"Fantastic ideas and inspiring insights into learning, playing and teaching music."
- Glory St. Germain
Ultimate Music Theory
David Reed
“What makes Musical U a great place to learn music is their atmosphere of caring about their students and really sharing the joy of music. It's a refreshing and welcome resource for all music lovers.”
- David Reed
Improvise For Real
Scott Sharp
"For those of us willing to seek it out, we now have the ability to invite the best musical instructors from all over the world into our homes to teach us the ideas that can open up the world of music to us. Our friends at Musical U are some of the best of the best!”
- Scott Sharp
Fretboard Toolbox
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Carol S.
"This course has help me to focus better. I am able to zoom in on my weaknesses and correct them immediately. I now have a Process to “Plan, Do and Reflect“ in order to improve whatever I decide to work on. It is a short process, is efficient and it works."
— Carol S., Musical Superlearning student
Andrea N.
"It’s been turning my practice upside down. I’m constantly hearing little things that I realize I can do better. And that gives me so many tasks."
— Andrea N., Musical Superlearning student
Diane M.
"I am so grateful to this class. Yes, grateful to understand my teacher and become a better student—-but most of all, to fill in the gaps in the process and understand how each part of the the process works together."
— Diane M., Musical Superlearning student
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Here's Everything You Get When You Buy Musical Superlearning Today:
Musical Superlearning
  • The Unique 4-Week Course On Superlearning Techniques For Music
  • Weekly Modules Covering The Four Essential Topics: Contextual Interference, Deliberate Practice, Memorisation and Mindset
  • "Learn" Lessons Teach You The Powerful Underlying Concepts
  • ​"Practice" Lessons Teach You New Practice Techniques Using Specific Guided Exercises
  • "Apply" Lessons Show You How To Bring Your New Practice Techniques To Real Tasks From Your Own Music Learning
  • ​Flexible and Convenient Online Access 24/7
  • ​Unlimited Personal Support and Guidance
Get Instant Access Today
For Just $199!
Get Instant Access Today
For Just $199!
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GUARANTEED
We are so confident that you’ll love this training course and be delighted with the transformation it produces in your music-learning results that we are covering it with a 90-Day 100% Money-Back Guarantee.
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Musical Superlearning Case Studies

Chris W.

Chris had been struggling to learn the piano for nearly 20 years. He’d accumulated a vast library of music, practiced for hours on end, and been frustrated throughout his musical journey. Nothing seemed to put all the pieces together for him. After being diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, he contemplated giving up music entirely. But something inside him said to keep going. 

He found Musical Superlearning and decided that he was going to give it one final effort. Chris was highly skeptical during the initial week of the course and nearly gave up. It felt like just more academic material than actual practice techniques. He persisted and continued to go through the training even though frustrated with the process.

Since completing the course, he’s found a new relationship with his piano that didn’t exist before. He wakes up early every morning excited to begin his daily practice, confident that he now has a system that works for him. Pieces that he struggled with for years are now possible. And he feels confident playing in front of other people. Chris stated that this method has given him a new lease on life and his love for music has been rejuvenated.

Tricia E.

Tricia came into music later in life when she realized that the poetry she was writing was actually a song. She found that the ukulele was the instrument that spoke to her and began to explore his musicality. While she wasn’t able to take private lessons, she gathered resources and began learning techniques and theory to help in her songwriting. 

She came to Musical Superlearning when she heard about the concepts on the Musicality Now podcast. She believed in the science behind learning and was eager to see how these scientific concepts would be applied to music learning. 

What Tricia enjoyed most about the course was communicating with other musicians and finding out how they were practicing. She has found that she’s able to approach learning with a different mindset now that she knows exactly how to overcome difficulties in something that she’s learning. It’s taken away the fear of learning something new and given her a new confidence moving forward. 

Diane M.

Diane began playing piano at an early age, but always felt like she wasn’t “talented enough” to pursue music studies. She reluctantly stopped taking private lessons when she felt like she wasn’t getting ahead although was still a passionate music lover. She made sure that music was a part of her children’s lives and eagerly followed their musical progress. After retirement from a career teaching foreign language, she decided that she would pursue music learning no matter what. 

She was eager to start Musical Superlearning because she always felt that she had difficulties practicing correctly. In her mind, this was part of the reason that she stopped taking piano lessons during her childhood. This was an opportunity to solve something that had been troubling her for some time. 

Since taking the course, she’s found that she’s able to better plan and focus throughout all her music practice. She’s better able to memorize music and retrieve music from previous practice sessions. Having the community and other like-minded musicians around her during the course enhanced her understanding of the concepts. Diane looks to a bright future where she has the tools to learn and perform as a confident musician. 
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Carolyn M.

Carolyn first started playing music after a career as a university educator. In her local community she plays in several ukulele groups and enjoys the experience of playing with other musicians. It’s made for a colorful life in her retirement that she’s been enjoying. 

She came to Musical Superlearning because she always felt like she didn’t really know what to practice. While she had teachers, it was a struggle to decide what to work on in between her lessons that would keep her moving forward. She would question what she was doing and felt like learning should be easier for her. 

While Carolyn was well versed in the theory behind learning, this course was the first time she saw it put into concrete steps that she could apply to see results quickly. Being able to apply these principles into action has been valuable on many levels and she looks forward to a lifetime of learning and exploring her musicality. 

Iddo O.

Iddo has been playing the flute for most of his life. After secondary school, he attended university and even studied music with a professional flautist. As he grew in his profession and raised a family, Iddo continued to play music in a very different way. He improvised and weaved his own musical landscapes on a regular basis and enjoyed the role that music played in his life.

He first came to Musical U through the course Foundations of a Musical Mind and was impressed with the playful and joyful nature of the course. It fit in well with the way that he was approaching music practice and found that it gave him a better understanding of the relationships between different pitches and harmonies. As Musical Superlearning became available for enrollment, he was intrigued to explore the science of music learning in greater detail. 

Since finishing the course, Iddo has added prepared classical pieces back into his repertoire and began studying privately again. He’s looking at his music practice in a different way and enjoys having short bursts of deliberate practice to improve his technical skills. Improving on his instrument has transformed from a repetitive slog to periods of intense focus with concrete results. Iddo looks forward to continuing the journey and enjoying the role that music plays in his life.

Dave W.

Dave had early experiences with music that left him feeling like this wasn’t going to be for him. He was asked to leave the school wind orchestra and struggled with a barely functioning guitar during his early lessons. The love and appreciation of music remained, albeit the guitar simply sat alone and unused in the corner of his home study. 

As his only son was getting ready to leave the home, Dave heard him practicing “Blackbird” and was suddenly inspired to spend the last days with his son playing music. This joyful time encouraged Dave to learn the song note-perfect, which he was proud to share with his son some months later. Dave would go on to studying with private teachers and taking Foundations of a Musical Mind from Musical U. 

Nearing retirement, he was inspired to take Musical Superlearning based on the results that he’d seen Gregg get from other students during a live Practiclasses. Dave now has a fresh outlook on his true musical potential and a renewed focus in his practice. Having a step-by-step approach to applying deliberate practice has made practicing more enjoyable and fruitful. More than anything, Dave has embraced a growth mindset that extends far beyond his music practice but into the rest of his life as well. 
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More Case Studies Below!

This Might Be The Most Important Decision You Ever Make In Music 

We’ve been raised to believe that hard work produces results.

“If you want to learn, you have to study hard.”

And, if we are studying hard but learning is still challenging... 

Well, we’ve just reached our natural limitations!

But what if that’s wrong?

What if it’s possible to learn dramatically faster, with the same amount of time and effort?

What if there are no natural limitations to what you can accomplish?
New possibilities
Science has long proven this to be true.

But the world is only now starting to catch on.

And now, for the first time, any musician can master the very same techniques which have always been behind so-called “talent” and “natural-born prodigies”. 
Are you ready to join this superlearning revolution?
When you tap into the techniques of “superlearning” you will astonish yourself by how quickly you improve and how far you can go.

This is the “lead domino”.

When you master this one skill - when you “learn how to learn” - everything else falls into place.

Decide now to fix the “How” of practice and:

  • Rapid progress will be normal
    … however much time you have for practice.
  • Your playing will be faster, cleaner, and mistake-free
    ... and it will actually feel easier than before.
  • You will break through any plateau and reach new levels
    … no matter what your innate abilities might be.
  • ​Improvement will be consistent, with clear, measureable progress every time
    … whatever plan you follow or what you choose to work on in practice.
  • ​You will feel 100% clarity, have unwavering motivation and be eager to practice every time
    … with no discipline or forcing-yourself required.
  • ​Performing with confidence will be natural and enjoyable
    … because you’ll know with certainty you will play at your best.
  • ​Your musical life will be one of enjoyment, fulfilment, satisfaction and pride
    … and people will wonder how exactly you suddenly became so “talented”.

Where will you be one year from today?

If you continue on the way you always have, then the chances are your musical life will look much the same.

You might have made a bit of progress... 

Some improvement here and there...

But if you’re practicing the way you always have then you’ll see only the same slow progress you always have.

AND you’ll have lost another year without really moving closer to your true dreams in music.

You probably see it now: until you “fix the how” you are wasting your money, time, and energy - because you’re getting just 10% of the results you could be getting in music.
Or: make this one decision now, to “fix the how”.
Spend just four weeks investing in “learning how to learn”, with the proven tools and techniques of super-fast learning.

Transform your music practice from the old paradigms that waste your time and effort - into the new, high-efficiency methods that deliver maximum impact from every minute spent.

Learn both the specific, practical tools you can apply immediately and the underlying methods which empower you to create your own superlearning tools on-the-fly to conquer any musical challenge.

Unlock the true power of your memory with the counter-intuitive methods that are proven to let anybody absorb and retain information at previously-unthinkable levels.

Break through all the limitations you thought were fixed and innate - and watch as your fingers move faster and more accurately than you dreamed was possible, and your playing reaches incredible new heights.
And enjoy the dramatic acceleration of everything you choose to learn in music in future - every day, for the rest of your life.
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Stan A.
"Success: I had an instrumental to perform at Church yesterday. Usually I am worried and reviewing it in my head up until I play it. I had done spacing and retrieval so I kept repeating to myself that I had done the work so ‘trust the process’. What happened? I played the instrumental with no issues! (I did include a couple prayers, too)"
— Stan A., Musical Superlearning student
Elizabeth M.
"I have seen a difference in all areas of my playing since starting this course which is great – sometimes get ‘ooh, did I really just play those bars, at that speed?’ kind of a feeling, and not just on sections I’ve been working on in the course. I found I was feeling excited about practising today, rather than ‘I suppose I ought to…’
— Elizabeth M., Musical Superlearning student
Musical Superlearning Case Studies

Klaudia H.

Klaudia grew up in Hungary learning the Kodály method of music education and her house was always very musical. Yet she always felt like her teachers and instructors weren’t supportive in their instruction. The music system was very judgemental and looking for errors, which would demoralize her and cause her to not want to practice. Eventually, she stopped trying to learn the classical guitar until later in her adult years. 

Watching younger performers on YouTube inspired Klaudia to finally take up her goals of learning to play guitar. With the help of her guitar teacher and Musical U, she was able to put together some of the pieces that she was missing. As the lessons got progressively harder, she knew that she needed to become more focused and productive in her music practice. Musical Superlearning appealed to her because of the focus on what’s in the mind rather than just the fingers. 

Klaudia has really enjoyed learning these new methods of practice and finds that it makes practice more enjoyable and she’s seeing real improvement. Interacting with other students during the course gave her confidence because she can see that other musicians are experiencing the same difficulties. Having other musicians to gain inspiration from has been a big benefit to her music learning. Klaudia looks forward to continuing to build on what she’s gained and has a greater clarity of her musical goals after taking the course. 

Gerry W.

Gerry had never been interested in music through his entire life. He was an athlete playing multiple sports, serving in the military and working in private security. After he turned 60, he had the sudden desire to learn the piano and never turned back. 

Now retired, Gerry has the time to practice as many hours in the day that he’d like, but finds that it can be frustrating to work on a single thing for multiple hours at time. He’s highly disciplined and regimented in his personal practice and thought that if he just practiced more and practiced harder things would just get better. He’s found that’s not actually the case and is now working on multiple tunes simultaneously.

Going through Musical Superlearning has given Gerry a positive growth mindset that realizes he’s capable of achieving any goal he sets for himself. Having a toolbox that he can reference for whatever problem he’s encountering has made practice a joy and his improvement fast. He looks forward to continuing to enjoy the journey and learn as much as possible in this new passion.

HappyRon

HappyRon first discovered music through the Beatles at age 10. But he wasn’t in a musical household and faced some difficulties getting started in music until the age of 30. As someone of the Autistic spectrum and suffering from not having a left hip socket, he persevered and was one of San Diego’s most frequent open mic performers throughout his 40s. 

After finally getting a hip replacement at the age of 48, he found that he was able to create music much easier and became passionate about teaching others. HappyRon states that he most enjoys teaching people that “don’t believe they have what it takes to be musical” and showing them that music is a skill that anyone can develop. He took the course Musical Superlearning from Musical U to learn more about the science of learning for himself and his students. 

After completing the course, HappyRon has learned new tricks and techniques that he can use to make learning new music faster and more productive. He looks forward to continuing to perform in his hometown and teaching the next generation of musicians that music is for everyone and they can accomplish amazing things as well. HappyRon is the definition of a musician with a growth mindset and continues to push his own boundaries!
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Tina R.

Tina started playing the violin at a young age in a Suzuki-style program at a local university, though she had her eyes on the cello early on. As she went to college, she was finally able to get a cello on loan from a friend and began to take some lessons with students at the college she attended. After moving cross-country following college, the cello found its way into the closet where it would sit for the next 18 years. 

Tina decided that she would either start playing her instrument or give it a good home, so she dove straight into private lessons with a couple of teachers. Musical U training helped to fill in some of the gaps and make her lessons more productive, but there was still something missing. After encountering the methods taught in Musical Superlearning, she was eager to see how this could be applied to her own music learning. 

Since going through the course, she’s more confident in her own playing abilities and able to appreciate the value of her mistakes. Having a structure to practice and learn her music is something that she’d been working on, but it’s more clear than ever. Tina has recommended the course to all her music learning friends, and especially musicians preparing for college music because of the structure and discipline that she’s been able to encode into her own practice. 

Kate S.

After a dreadful experience with a hyper-critical piano teacher early in her youth, Kate completely gave up on learning music. It wasn’t until she met her husband, an accomplished bass player, that she had the confidence and desire to give music a second chance in her life. Since then, she’s expanded her musical repertoire to include all the instruments in the saxophone family, the trombone, and euphonium. Kate plays in a community wind band in addition to several smaller ensembles.

Prior to Musical Superlearning, Kate wasn’t sure how to actually run her practice sessions. With such a variety of literature and instruments, she found it difficult to structure her practice in the most productive way. Rhythm was something that she continuously struggled to internalize and had trouble staying locked into the groove.

Since taking the course, Kate feels a new sense of optimism and focus when practicing music. She’s able to figure out difficult passages more easily on her own and enjoys reflecting on her practice and planning the next session. Having an open mind and jumping into the training has been a great benefit and she looks forward to her next lesson with a renewed sense of focus.

Ray B.

Ray had started playing guitar at an early age in a variety of different genres. After settling into a professional career, he continued to play part-time but was eager to return to his first passion. Retirement gave Ray the opportunity to pursue a full-time career as a musician and quickly found steady work gigging around Portugal. As a lifelong learner, he was continuously pursuing new techniques that would help him perform better.

Ray first discovered Gregg Goodhart through Musical U and was intrigued by the ideas that he heard. He hoped that this level of training would help him be more productive and accomplish more in his practice sessions. While he had the time to practice 3-4 hours a day, he was confident that modest improvements to his practice routine would have a big impact.

Since completing the course, Ray has found these methods to be profound. He feels like a single hour session using this system is more productive than an entire week of his normal practice routine. Tunes that he thought he knew inside and out have seen dramatic improvement and he’s enjoying the learning process more than ever before. He’s nearly at the edge of his seat thinking about his next focused music practice. 
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More Case Studies Below!

Frequently-Asked Questions
Q: When does the course begin? Is it flexible?
The course is structured as a 4-week program providing daily training five days/week. However you can move through the course at your own pace and will have lifetime access to the materials.

The first of the four weekly modules will open for you after you purchase, and the following modules each week after that.

The daily lessons for each week are provided at the start of the week for you to go through whenever you're ready. 

So you are free to begin the program whenever you like and proceed at your own pace.
Q: How much time will it take?
We estimate it will take 15-30 minutes/day to complete each week's module, depending on your prior knowledge, how quickly you go through the material and how long you spend on the exercises.
Q: What happens at the end of the course, can I keep the material?
Yes. You’ll have access to the web material even after the "official" 4-week period is over, for as long as you need.
Q: Will this work for my instrument?
The course is designed to be accessible and usable with all instruments. 

Although specific exercises are given, these are adaptable to your instrument and current ability level. Each week you'll also be guided through applying the techniques to the repertoire and skills you are currently working on.
Q: Is this suitable for beginners? Do I need to read music?
The course is designed to be accessible to anybody who has been playing an instrument for at least a couple of months.

All the material can be applied at any level of instrument ability.

Although some mentions of traditional notation may occur in the coures, it is not necessary that you read notation (sheet music, chord charts or tab). 

However you normally learn and play music, you will be able to apply the course material.
Q: What if I get stuck or need help?
At Musical U we specialise in helping adult music-learners succeed with online training materials.

Any time you feel stuck, confused, have a question or need help, our team will be standing by and happy to help. 

The first option is to post in the discussions you'll find throughout the course. Our team will be in there every day answering questions and providing any clarification or tips required.

The second option is to contact our team directly if you'd prefer to receive help privately. You can do this by email or using the message system on the site.

The third option is to make use of the Live Drop-in calls provided as a bonus with this course. You can attend live and ask any questions you have, or send us a question in advance for us to answer on the call and then watch the recording at your convenience afterwards.
Q: Is this suitable for teachers?
We are always eager to support music teachers in any way we can. So (as always with Musical U materials) although we don't design specifically for use by teachers with their students we are happy for you to adapt our material for that purpose as suits your teaching. If you need any specific permission or clarification please get in touch (support@musical-u.com) and we'll be happy to help.
Q: Can you really experience a dramatic acceleration of music learning in just 4 weeks?
In short: yes.

The techniques taught in this course can have an immediate noticeable effect on your learning. That's why Gregg is able to get up on stage for one of his live "Practiclass" events, and in just 20 minutes help a student he's never met before break through whatever challenge they had been stuck on.

The course is designed to both teach you the superlearning techniques, and guide you through getting used to how they work by applying them to your real music-learning tasks. So you aren't just learning concepts in the abstract - you will be experiencing the impact of these techniques throughout the 4 weeks in your music practice and the results you get.

If you have any doubts, please check out some of the case studies on this page for stories of real music learners of all backgrounds, goals, instruments and abilities, who've seen massive impact from taking the course and applying these techniques.

Our team will be there with you, day by day, to ensure you too get these kinds of results. 

And if for any reason you're not 100% satisfied with the transformation in results that this course delivers you by the end then we stand by our money-back guarantee (details above) for a full 90 days after your purchase.
Any other questions?
We're a people-first company and put heavy emphasis on providing personal support to ensure each and every person who comes to us succeeds with their training.

So if you have any questions about the course (or just want to talk through whether it's right for you) please get in touch. We'll be glad to help :)

Email: support@musical-u.com
Telephone (US): +1 (415) 230 0296
Telephone (UK): +44 203 290 2961

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Musical Superlearning Case Studies

Robert R.

Robert has been playing piano his entire life, but was able to pursue with far greater passion and dedication after retirement. He was fortunate enough to get into a big band and was continuously inspired and motivated by the high caliber of the musicians that he was surrounded with. Being with musicians that were at a higher skill level than himself encouraged him to begin exploring the techniques that they talked about, which led him to Musical U. 

He was first exposed to some of the methods taught in Musical Superlearning through a jazz workshop that taught about memorizing charts. After seeing the results that this approach had on his performances, he was confident that the course would have a big impact on his playing. 

Since starting the course, Robert enjoys having a step-by-step process that he can work through when practicing. This takes a lot of the guesswork out of his time and encourages him to continue moving forward. He likens the techniques to having a toolkit that can be used at will to whatever difficulties he’s facing so he can get through them and finish learning his next chart. Robert looks forward to continuing to learn and becoming a more instrumental part of his big band in the future. 

Stanley A.

Stanley has found a great calling in his retirement, exploring the possibilities on his guitar and playing for worship services. He and his wife perform together on a regular basis and love the impact that music has on their lives nearly every day. While he doesn’t have a teacher, he’s found online learning to be a great way to supplement his self-study and continue moving forward. 

Stanley had first seen the impact of Gregg’s methods through a Practiclass at Musical U. So when a new course came out with these methods, he knew that it was something he needed to be a part of. He dove into the lessons with gusto and began applying the various tools to his music. 

Since starting the course, he’s done his best to adopt the beginner’s mindset and be open to new experiences. He’s felt like he’s jumped a couple of levels in his musicality in just a few short weeks and is playing pieces that he’s been working on for years. Stanley looks forward to continuing to build upon this foundation and revisiting these tools well into the future. 

Chris M.

Chris started playing the piano at age 12, but was never able to stay consistent with her music practice. It seemed that the world would put barriers in her way no matter what she did to overcome them. In 2018, she finally decided that the time was right to really devote herself to music and began practicing in earnest. 

Before joining Musical U, Chris was stuck in the idea of “no pain, no gain” in her music practice. She wasn’t comfortable with public performances and felt like she was stuck in her practice routine. It was difficult to move to the next step. Musical Superlearning appealed to her because it would help put the rest of the pieces together and allow her to finally move forward. 

She enjoyed the methodical nature of the course and found that she was able to quickly apply the tools to her pieces and technical practice. Chris was most amazed at how much progress she was able to make in just 5 minutes of concentrated deliberate practice. What she enjoys the most is just going through her songbooks and being able to recall the piece with ease. She can’t wait to see what she experiences next.
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Peter B.

Peter had a negative musical experience early in life which left him a bit jaded. He picked back up in his 40’s by playing guitar and playing some of his favorite songs. While he did show some progress, there were parts of his music that he still felt uncomfortable with and wasn’t improving on. He began to doubt that music was ever going to be an enduring part of his life. 

After discovering Musical U he was interested in overcoming his plateaus and making greater progress. He enjoyed practicing and playing various instruments, but not making any solid progress was beginning to make him doubt whether he would ever be able to play the songs of his youth. 

Since joining the course, Peter has enjoyed the consistent methodology that’s applied to music learning. Learning a new song has become more enjoyable because he knows exactly what tools to apply to get it under his fingers. What he enjoys the most is the sense of accomplishment he’s able to feel on a regular basis, which gives him the confidence and motivation to keep moving forward. 

Carol S.

Carol had always loved music, but her parents weren’t supportive of her getting an instrument and lessons. She saved up money from her early working life and bought her first guitar which ignited a lifelong passion for music. Now in her retirement, she’s taken to playing the fiddle in many of the musical groups in her town. 

Carol came to the course to try to learn the vast repertoire of music required for gigs more quickly. Most of the literature is learned through rote memorization and requires the musicians to be able to recall songs quickly as the band leader calls out the next tune. 

What she’s found during the course is that she’s able to recall tunes easier and with more confidence. The tools that she’s learned have been a game changer and made every aspect of her practice more enjoyable. Having everything laid out in a clear step-by-step manner makes sense to her and it becomes achievable. She’s looking forward to her new musical future with these skills in hand.
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