About Parkdale Guitar
Are you someone who wants to get your guitar playing off the ground and take the instrument to the next level? Maybe you're an absolute beginner who doesn't really have high expectations for how good you could become on the guitar. I want to help you exceed where you think you can be, and open the instrument up in a fun and inspiring way. Perhaps you are a competent guitar player, but you hit some walls that are frustrating. I can help you get over those walls, and show you tricks and ways of thinking that will launch your momentum again. Maybe you have some issues with rhythm playing, or playing full songs from front to end? I can really help with this. Are you an advanced guitar player, who wants to learn some crazy improvising techniques, tricks, theory, style? I'd be more than happy to show you all the things I know, and help you open a new dimension to your guitar playing.
My name is KC Roberts
and I teach guitar out my home studio in Parkdale (Toronto, Canada). Lessons with me are private one on one sessions, and the atmosphere is comfortable and relaxed. I'm a professional guitar player, and have also been teaching for the last 15 years. I teach guitar and bass, and music in general. I'm very passionate about music, and very passionate about making sure you get what you want out of our time together. I love every style, and am the lead guitar player, singer and songwriter of a popular band out of Toronto. I have experience teaching children as young as 7 and adults as old as 65. I've taught teenagers with specific musical tastes, curious beginners, college music students, and people who just wanna strum songs and sing. Through consistent lessons I've had a 10 year old boy playing Stevie Ray Vaughn solos, a 15 year old girl playing complex Jamiroquai and Tower Of Power bass lines, worked with young singer songwriters to deepen their songwriting craft, and I've helped Adult students discover or rediscover in ways they didn't expect. I've been playing guitar since I was 7 (I'm 35) and I remember what it's like to learn and overcome certain frustrating roadblocks. It's always a satisfying thing to show students a faster and more effective way to learn what they really want.