We bring concert-stage musicians into your practice room.
Our story
iLearnIt started with a frustration most students of classical music share: the best teachers live in the wrong cities, charge the wrong prices, or have wait-lists that close before you can blink. The pandemic-era explosion of online music platforms proved that great instruction could travel — but most of what shipped felt thin: short clips, weak structure, no follow-through.
We set out to do something more like a conservatory class than a content feed. Every iLearnIt course is filmed in studio with multi-angle cameras, broken into a clear curriculum with sections and learning outcomes, and paired with downloadable annotated sheet music. The result is a library you actually finish — not a feed you scroll past.
What we teach
Three instruments, deep coverage on each:
- Guitar — classical, Spanish, Renaissance lute, fingerstyle. From Sor and Tárrega studies to Villa-Lobos and Bach lute suite transcriptions.
- Piano — Baroque (Bach's Well-Tempered Clavier, Goldberg Variations), Romantic (Chopin nocturnes, Liszt études), and structured technique work.
- Violin — Bach Sonatas & Partitas, Paganini Caprices, the Tchaikovsky concerto, Russian-school technique, and historically informed baroque practice.
Our instructors
Every iLearnIt instructor is a working professional. Conservatory training is the baseline; the people we work with also have real concert résumés and at least a decade of teaching experience. We pay them well, give them editorial control over their courses, and let them say no to material that doesn't fit their voice.
How we charge
One-time purchases, three flat tiers ($9.99 / $19.99 / $39.99 per course). No auto-renewing subscriptions. Once you buy a course it's yours forever, across every device on your Apple or Google account. We never charge again for the same content.
Where we're going
The roadmap: offline video downloads, instructor live Q&A sessions, community discussion under each lesson, ensemble courses for chamber-music players, and ear-training drills tied to the repertoire.