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OBEDIA provides online music production training. Rather than prerecorded courses or blog-style tutorials, it offers live one-on-one coaching with real audio engineers. The service is aimed mainly at home studio and music production users, covering major DAWs such as Pro Tools, Studio One, Ableton Live, Cubase, and Logic Pro, as well as support for hardware like audio interfaces, MIDI devices, and keyboard controllers.
Based on the available content, OBEDIA focuses on personalized training for solving problems on demand. After purchasing a subscription or a block of minutes, users can schedule online sessions and learn in real time via TeamViewer remote desktop, Monday to Friday, 10:00–18:00 CST. Topics include beat making, vocal recording, DAW operation, mixing and mastering, releasing music to Spotify, and an introduction to the music business. It is more like a remote mentor/technical support service than a structured university-style course.
Pricing is transparent: the monthly plan costs $49.99 and includes 30 minutes, or about $1.66/minute; the annual plan costs $536.40 and includes 360 minutes, or about $1.49/minute; without a subscription, minutes can be purchased at $1.99/minute. Subscriptions can be canceled, and OBEDIA offers a satisfaction refund guarantee. If you only need occasional troubleshooting, paying by the minute is flexible. If you want to study music production systematically, however, the minute-based model may create time pressure, and the total cost could be higher than prerecorded courses.
The main advantage is real-time one-on-one help tailored to the user’s own software version, plugins, hardware, and workflow—useful when YouTube tutorials cannot address a specific personal issue. The site also emphasizes that it has served the audio industry since 2004 and displays testimonials from producers and engineers. Limitations include the lack of visible certificate or accreditation information, no clear statement on teaching language, and lesson times based on U.S. Central Time, which may be inconvenient for users in China. The remote desktop experience also depends on network stability.
OBEDIA is best suited to musicians who want to quickly solve DAW bottlenecks, set up a home studio, learn mixing/mastering, or understand digital distribution—especially those with specific questions. It is less suitable for users who want low-cost, structured self-study, Chinese-language instruction, or certificate-backed training. The text does not specify access or payment availability from China, and TeamViewer plus cross-border payments may involve uncertainty. Alternatives include official DAW tutorials, music production courses on Udemy/Coursera, YouTube/Bilibili tutorials, or domestic music production training providers.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on obedia.com official site.
obedia.com is an United States Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach obedia.com directly.