The three courses that get your hands to follow your ear — so you see the whole neck, build solos that actually say something, and sound like the players you came here to sound like.
Worth $305. This weekend only, all three are $177.60 — plus a free roadmap.
It's ten o'clock, the house is finally quiet, and the backing track is looping in A — the one you put on tonight to really practice this time.
Your solo comes around. Your hand goes to a shape you know cold. You run it. It fits the changes — technically — and it says nothing. Twelve bars later you reach over, stop the track, and sit there with that same old gap opening up in your chest.
If your first move in that moment is to reach for a shape instead of a sound, keep reading. Because that gap isn't a sign you're behind on theory.
You already did the work. You learned the scales. You can find the notes on the neck. None of that was wasted — it's real, and you'll lean on every bit of it.
What no one trained is the link between the theory in your head and the music in your hands. That link is the whole thing. Miss it, and every new lesson just hands you more to read. Train it, and the shapes you already know start to sing.
The players you're chasing aren't reading a thing.
They hear a line a half-second before it happens, and their hands go where the ear points. That half-second is the game.
And here's the part that isn't your fault: nobody trained you to do it, because it's easier to sell you one more diagram than to teach you to hear. So course after course handed you shapes — and every shape quietly deepened the habit of looking instead of listening.
Which leaves you with two ways to play. In the first, your eyes lead and your hands chase a page. In the second, your ear leads and your hands follow you. Everything you actually want lives in the second one — and you get there on purpose, in order, starting with the notes already under your fingers.
You train it with two moves that run through all three courses:
Hear the note before your hand moves — never the other way around. Do it enough and the wiring flips: your ear starts to lead on its own.
A small, movable map of the notes that matter over a blues, so you're never staring at the whole neck wondering what fits. You solo from it.
Those two moves are the spine of the whole bundle. The legends in Course Three lean on the same Framework — you'll just hear it in their hands. So here's the path, in the order it's built to go.
Each one hands off to the next. See the neck, take the solo, sound like the legends.
You can't play what you hear if you don't know where it lives. This turns the neck from a grid of shapes into one connected map, so the note in your ear has an address your hand can reach. Everything after this stands on it.
Inside: the five and seven positions of the major scale, the Am pentatonic connected across the whole neck, double-stops and intervals, triads and 7th arpeggios — with "JAM" checkpoints where you actually solo what you just learned.
10 sections · 150+ lessonsNow you build a line that means something. A short idea that breathes, repeats, and lands — instead of a scale you pour over the changes and hope. This is where hunting for notes turns into saying something.
Inside: the Framework over a blues in A, the "hot notes" and why they pull, blue notes and bends, short lines that leave space, and playing in time so the phrase sits in the pocket.
35 lessons + backing tracksNow you sound like the players you love — the same Framework, now in five legends' hands, pulled apart move by move so you can use it tonight.
Inside: BB King's octaves and space · SRV's double-stops and call-and-response · Clapton's 1-3-5 targeting and feel · Derek Trucks' vocal bend of the 6th · plus a John Mayer bonus.
5 legends · 104 lessons · every backing trackThree courses, one 12-week path:
Unlocking the Fretboard — the whole neck as one map.
Simple, Tasteful Soloing — the Framework over a blues in A.
Famous Artist Phrasing — one legend at a time.
The 12-week plan above, printable — it sequences all three courses week by week, names the exact lessons to work, and tells you the one thing to practice next. The bundle turns into progress instead of three tabs you keep meaning to open.
Bought on their own, the three run $305. This weekend, together with the roadmap, they're $177.60.
A full path — not a sampler. In the order it's built to go.
Don't treat this like one more course to collect. The moment you're in, open the roadmap, start Course One, put the guitar in your hands, and play the first lesson slow.
The shift comes sooner than you'd guess. The first time a line leaves your ear and lands under your fingers on its own, you'll feel exactly what all those diagrams were missing. After that it's reps — and the three courses are built to give you the right ones in the right order.
Fifteen minutes a day is plenty. The lessons are short and made to be played, not watched, and they wait for you on the days life gets loud.
Fair — and you know they're good. The other two, plus the roadmap, still run well past $177.60 on their own. You keep what you have; this fills in the rest of the path.
Forever. All three courses and the roadmap are yours to keep and come back to whenever you want.
Then these are built for you. Short, do-it-now lessons, and a roadmap that picks the one thing to practice so you never lose time deciding. You set the pace; the courses wait.
Because three is the path — see the neck, take the solo, sound like the legends. A pile of ten would sit in your account and make you feel behind. This is the part you'll actually use.
Close to 300 lessons across the three courses, every backing track, and the 12-week roadmap. Unlocking the Fretboard alone is ten sections. It's a full path, not a sampler — and the roadmap keeps you from drowning in it.
Thirty days, every cent back, no hard feelings. The only way to know is to play it, so play it on me.
Nothing about being stuck was your fault. You were handed shapes and told that was the job. Now you know it wasn't — and that's the part that changes things.
From here it's one of two weekends.
The next time the solo comes around, you reach for the same shape and feel the same gap. Nothing changes, because nothing changed.
You spend a weekend training the link nobody trained you on — and the next time the track comes around to you, your hand is already moving.
Yes — I'm Getting Off the Page · $177.60It's $177.60 until Sunday at midnight. Monday it goes back to $305, and the weekend you picked is the one you'll be living in.
Happy Independence Day,
Rotem
P.S. The path, in order: see the neck, take the solo, sound like the legends — with a roadmap that tells you what to play next. $305 of courses for $177.60 through Sunday midnight, then it's back. If you read this far, you already know which weekend you want. Go take it.