Beatbox: The Instrument You Always Carry
What sets beatboxing apart from every other instrument: you need nothing. No guitar, no piano, no amplifier. Your mouth is everything you need.
This makes beatbox the perfect entry into music:
- Free to start: No instrument costs, no maintenance, no spare parts
- Practice anywhere: On the bus, in the shower, in the park — beatbox works everywhere
- Start immediately: No setup, no tuning, no equipment check
- Always with you: Your instrument is with you 24/7
With our crash course, you learn the fundamentals in four weeks — completely digital, on any device.
Beatboxing is catching on across New Brunswick, and Ortonville is no exception.
The Three Foundation Sounds: Kick, HiHat, and Snare
Every beatboxer starts with three sounds that together create a complete drum beat:
- Kick Drum (B): A deep, punchy bass sound. Shape your lips like the letter "B" and let the air burst out explosively.
- HiHat (Ts): A sharp, short hiss. The tongue tip taps behind the upper front teeth — like an exaggerated "Ts."
- Snare Drum (Pf): The classic snare clap. A combination of "P" and "F" where air escapes sideways through the cheeks.
These three sounds are the foundation. When you combine them — B Ts Pf Ts, B Ts Pf Ts — you have your first beat. This genuinely works in under 30 minutes.
Beatboxing as Brain Training
Beatboxing isn't just music — it's a cognitive workout. Research shows:
- Motor coordination: Producing complex rhythms requires precise coordination of lips, tongue, jaw, and breathing — simultaneously
- Working memory: Remembering and executing beat patterns trains your short-term memory
- Rhythm processing: Musical rhythm training improves timing, attention, and executive function
- Multitasking: Advanced beatboxers layer multiple sounds, training the brain to process parallel tasks
- Creativity: Improvising beats activates creative neural pathways — the same ones used in problem-solving
Studies at Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg show that children who beatbox develop better articulation and phonological awareness. It's music-making that makes you smarter.
Whether you're in central Ortonville or the surrounding New Brunswick area, you can start learning right from home.
Your Start: The 4-Week Crash Course
The course is designed for complete beginners — no prior experience needed. In four weeks, you build your skills step by step:
- Week 1: Foundations — Basic sounds, breathing control, first simple rhythms
- Week 2: Patterns — Combining sounds into beats, timing and groove
- Week 3: Advanced — Lip Roll, bass drops, complex patterns and transitions
- Week 4: Creativity — Original beats, special sounds, and performance techniques
Includes video, image, and audio material, tips & tricks for beginners and advanced learners, plus an eBook on beatbox history and culture. All digital, instantly available.
Currently available for just €19.99 (reduced from €99). That's less than a single music lesson — for a complete 4-week programme.
Beatboxing in Ortonville
Canada has a growing beatbox scene, with communities in every major city and beyond. In Ortonville, New Brunswick, you're well-positioned to connect with fellow beatboxers both locally and across the country. Canadian beatboxers have made their mark internationally, and the community is known for being welcoming to beginners. Online platforms make it easy to connect with other learners in Ortonville and across Canada.
Places to Connect in Ortonville
Looking for local music and youth activities near Ortonville? Check out these venues:
- New Denmark Community Centre (Community Centre) (~7.3 km)
- Family Resource Centre Inc. (Community Centre) — Rue Terrace Street 475, Grand Falls / Grand-sault (~10.4 km)
- Paul Pyres Community Centre (Community Centre) (~21.6 km)
And for everyone who wants to start right away: our online crash course works anywhere and is instantly available.
Important Note
We are not doctors, speech therapists, or orthodontists. The content on this page does not replace a medical diagnosis or therapy. For speech errors, pronunciation disorders, orthodontic abnormalities, or other health questions, please contact a speech therapy practice, orthodontic practice, or your pediatrician directly. Beatboxing can be a valuable supplement — but not a replacement for professional treatment.









