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Welcome to Sound Ninjas 🖐️
If you’re reading this, you’re officially part of the community. I’m really glad you’re here. This space exists for musicians who want to train deeply, think clearly, and grow together — especially in areas that are often neglected, like inner hearing, sight reading, and real musical understanding. To start building that culture, let’s do something simple: 👉 Introduce yourself below You can share as much or as little as you like, but here are a few prompts if you want guidance: Where are you from? What instrument(s) do you play? What’s your musical background? What are you currently working on or struggling with? What made you join Sound Ninjas? There are musicians here from different levels and paths — that diversity is a strength. This isn’t about showing off. It’s about learning, sharing, and improving together. Take a moment to say hello 👋 Read a few introductions. Start a conversation. This community becomes valuable through participation — and it starts with you. Welcome again. Let’s build something meaningful.
🧠Inner Hearing: the skill you use every day (even if you don’t train it)
Most musicians think inner hearing is something advanced — a skill you unlock after years of training. In reality, you’re already using it every single day. Every time you: - anticipate the next note - read ahead while playing - correct a pitch before touching the instrument feel that something is “off” before you can explain why …your inner hearing is working. The difference between struggling musicians and confident ones isn’t talent — it’s whether this skill is trained consciously or left to chance. Here’s a tiny experiment (no instrument needed): Exercise (30 seconds): - Imagine a single note (any pitch). - Hold it mentally for 5 seconds. - Now imagine that note moving one step up, then back down. Don’t sing. Don’t move. Just listen inside. If it felt blurry or unstable, that’s normal. If it felt clear, that’s trainable. If it felt hard — that’s exactly where growth starts. 👇 Community prompt (reply below): Was the imagined sound clear or fuzzy? What instrument do you mainly play? Do you usually hear music internally when you practice, or only when you read? No right answers here — just awareness. Inner hearing grows faster when it’s shared, verbalized, and reflected on. Let’s use this space for that. — Sound Ninjas 🥷🎶
How to start your musical 2026 with the right foot.
Hey everyone, Happy New Year 🎶 The first days of the year tend to disappear faster than expected. Between rest, reflection, family, and reorganizing priorities, it’s easy to go a bit quiet — and that’s okay. Silence is also part of music. As we start this new year together, I want to encourage something simple but powerful: sharing your playing. Not because it’s perfect. Not because it’s finished. But because sharing has real advantages: •It clarifies your thinking. When you play for others, you suddenly hear what really matters. •It builds consistency. Recording or sharing creates gentle accountability. •It shifts the focus from judgment to process. •It reminds you that music is a dialogue, not a private monologue. You don’t need to impress anyone here. This is a space for work-in-progress, experiments, questions, doubts, and growth. So if the year started quietly for you — good. Now let’s make it intentional. Whenever you’re ready, share something: a phrase, an étude, a rehearsal clip, an idea you’re working on. This year isn’t about showing more. It’s about listening better — to yourself and to each other. Let's use the poll in this post to share with the community our "sharing" habits. How often do you share your playing? Welcome back, and happy new year.
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🧠 The Inner Hearing Lab (in development)
We’re currently building The Inner Hearing Lab — a progressive training space dedicated to developing one of the most overlooked skills in musicianship: inner hearing. The Lab will start at the absolute foundation (a single imagined note) and evolve slowly, step by step, toward stable melodic hearing. Nothing rushed. Nothing assumed. This won’t be a collection of tips or random exercises. It’s a structured process designed to close the gap between notation, imagination, and sound. As members of this community, you’ll be able to: follow the Lab as it’s being built give feedback influence how future lessons evolve It should be ready in a week. For now, stay curious — and start noticing what you hear before you play.
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📣 New Rule in Sound Ninjas (Read This)
Most people think they should post only when they have something impressive to show. That’s wrong. In this community, the best posts are: questions half-formed ideas small discoveries struggles you’re currently facing So here’s a simple challenge 👇 🧠 Post using this format (copy/paste): 1️⃣ What are you currently working on? (one sentence is enough) 2️⃣ What feels unclear / difficult / interesting about it? 3️⃣ What kind of feedback would help you most right now? That’s it. No need to be polished. No need to be “good enough”. This community grows when people think out loud. 🎯 If you don’t know what to post — post that. Your post might unlock something for someone else. 🧊 let's break the ice!
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