The decision to start piano lessons gets made in a burst of resolve. Then comes the gap between booking and the first lesson, and the resolve curdles into questions. What if I’m hopeless? What if I can’t remember anything? What exactly happens in there?
This is the answer, in detail. Three weeks, lesson by lesson, including the between-lesson parts where most of the doubt actually lives. It’s written for new students here, but the shape of an honest first month is fairly universal, so read it even if you’re starting somewhere else.
The first lesson does not open with a test, an assessment, or anything resembling an audition. It opens with talking. What music do you love? What finally made you book this? Have you ever touched a piano, even badly, even in 1998? The answers shape everything that follows, because the fastest path runs through music you actually care about.
Then you play. Within the first half hour you’ll be making real sounds with intent, usually something connected to what you said you love, scaled honestly to where your hands are today. For a total beginner that might be a simple pattern that already sounds like music; for a returner it’s finding out what survived the years off, which is usually more than feared.
The room helps. There’s a real acoustic piano, plus a Fender Rhodes and a Hammond B3, and hearing what these instruments do tends to clarify what you want from all this. You leave with a small, concrete practice plan: what to work on, for roughly how long, and what “done” sounds like. Not “practice more.” A list.
One logistical note for week one: have your instrument situation sorted, or be honest that it isn’t. An 88-key weighted digital keyboard is completely fine to start on, and if you don’t have one yet, say so; part of the first lesson can be making sure you buy the right thing once instead of the wrong thing twice.
Here’s what nobody warns you about. The first week of home practice feels worse than the lesson did. In the lesson, things worked, because a teacher was steering in real time. Alone on Wednesday, your hands feel like borrowed equipment and the thing that was easy on Tuesday has apparently left town.
This is normal to the point of being universal. The skill being built in week one isn’t the music; it’s the sitting down. Twenty focused minutes, most days, phone in another room. If the assignment falls apart mid-week, you haven’t failed anything; you’ve generated exactly the information your second lesson is for. Write down what confused you and bring the list.
A large share of new students walk into lesson two and open with an apology. I practiced, but it fell apart. I think I forgot everything. I’m probably your worst student.
You’re not, and you didn’t. Lesson two is where the teaching actually starts, because now there’s data: how your hands behaved without supervision, where the plan was too ambitious, what your real week looks like as opposed to the idealized one from the first conversation. The plan gets recalibrated to the student who exists rather than the one who was imagined. That recalibration is the single most valuable thing about week two, and it only works if you show up unvarnished. Come confused. Confusion is the raw material.
By the end of lesson two the week-one material usually snaps back into place within minutes, which is its own little revelation: it wasn’t gone, it was consolidating.
Week three is typically where the first real signal arrives, and it’s quieter than people expect. Not a finished piece. Something more like: your hands find a position without looking. A passage that took ten minutes to assemble last week takes two. You catch your own mistake before the teacher mentions it. Practicing one evening, you notice you’re not watching the clock.
Small as they sound, these are the load-bearing milestones. They’re evidence that the system, weekly lesson, daily contact, honest recalibration, is working on you. The pieces come; they’re downstream of this.
Week three is also when the routine either sets or slips, so this is the week to defend the practice window on your calendar like a meeting. The same teacher you’ve had since week one, which here is every week by design, will be watching for exactly this and will say something if the routine is wobbling. That’s not surveillance; it’s the service.
Don’t worry about: slow progress against some imagined standard, forgetting things between lessons, hands that feel clumsy, or being “behind.” Behind what? You’re three weeks into a long, pleasant project.
Do say something about: physical pain (tension and fatigue are normal, pain is not, and it’s almost always a fixable posture or setup issue), an assignment that’s consistently impossible in your real week, or music that bores you. All three are solvable in one conversation, and all three quietly end lesson journeys when nobody mentions them.
The fuller picture of how lessons are built for working adults lives on the adult piano lessons page, and what everything costs, including how lessons here sit against the Chicago market, is laid out in the piano lesson cost guide.
If you haven’t booked yet, the on-ramp is small by design: a 30-minute trial lesson is $25, and trial students get first access to fall lesson slots. The fall semester runs August 24 to December 18, and the version of you sixteen weeks in will be glad the awkward weeks are these ones. Rather talk first? Book a free 15-minute call.
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Yourself and your honesty about goals and schedule; that’s genuinely it. If you have music you dream of playing, mention it or bring it. The studio has the instruments. If you don’t own a keyboard yet, say so at the first lesson and you’ll get specific, brand-agnostic guidance before spending anything.
Around 20 focused minutes most days, with specific assignments from each lesson. The early weeks are about establishing the sitting-down habit more than about volume. A fallen-apart practice week is normal and useful; bring what confused you to the next lesson.
Completely. New skills feel fragile for the first weeks because they’re consolidating below conscious awareness. Material that seems gone usually returns within minutes at the next lesson. The feeling fades noticeably around weeks three to four as the fundamentals automate.
The studio holds 24 weekly lesson times. When fall enrollment opens, the list hears first, before ads, before anyone else.
One or two emails before fall. No spam, ever.