Notewize

Practice guitar with real-time feedback, tempo control, and teacher-made lesson paths.
5 
Rating
63 votes
Your vote:
Visit Website
notewize.com
Loading
Info updated on:

Open Notewize when you sit down to practice and pick a song or lesson that matches what you’re working on. Start the video, then play along with the interactive track while the app listens to your guitar and flags wrong notes as they happen. After a run-through, replay the tricky section, slow it down, and follow the on-screen TAB as it scrolls in time. Use the accuracy results to decide what to repeat, then raise the tempo in small steps until the part feels solid.

For daily routines, it works well as a structured session: warm up with a short technique lesson, practice a song section at a reduced speed, then finish with a full-speed attempt and check the feedback to measure improvement. If you’re learning on the move, you can run quick drills with headphones and a compact guitar setup, using the instant note checking to stay honest about timing and pitch.

Teachers can build assignments by recording or assembling lesson materials, packaging them into a sequence, and sending students a clear path to follow between lessons. During review, students’ performance results make it easier to spot patterns—like rushing, missed transitions, or inaccurate fretting—so the next session can focus on specific fixes. Instructors can also publish lesson packs for other players to buy, turning classroom material into reusable content that supports a wider audience.

Screenshot (1)

Review Summary

Features

  • AI note listening with immediate mistake detection
  • lesson videos paired with interactive play-along songs
  • scrolling TAB synced to playback
  • tempo adjustment for slow practice and speed-building
  • performance results to track accuracy and progress
  • tools to create and organize lesson packs
  • marketplace to publish and sell teaching content
  • supports electric and acoustic guitar

How It’s Used

  • Slowing down difficult riffs and increasing speed in steps
  • practicing timing and transitions with real-time note checking
  • building a repeatable 20–30 minute daily practice routine
  • remote or between-lesson assignments for students
  • diagnosing common errors using performance feedback
  • creating a curriculum path for beginners to advanced players
  • selling structured lesson packs to reach students beyond local sessions

Comments

5
Rating
63 votes
5 stars
0
4 stars
0
3 stars
0
2 stars
0
1 stars
0
User

Your vote:

Recent downloads