Guitarist Gergely Szabo has an Advanced Diploma in Music Performance from Cambrian College where he majored in the classical guitar. Over his time there, he completed 2 years of comprehensive pedagogy courses. He also gained well grounded vocal skills, as well as basic knowledge on the piano. Outside of classical music, he exhibits a repertoire of skills and knowledge in playing the genres of rock, blues, and heavy metal music. He has experience in teaching the guitar and the ukulele to a range of people aged 6 to 54.
Gergely’s teaching methods include both the use of books and digital methods. The three main books he uses to teach guitar are as follows: “Guitar Method Book 1 by Will Schmid and Greg Koch,” “Four Star Sight Reading and Ear Tests RCM Level 1,” and “Classical Guitar Repertoire and Etudes RCM Level 1.” For teaching ukulele, he uses the book “Ukulele Songs for 1, 2, or 3 players by Elizabeth Ragsdale.” Aside from these, he frequently uses the Muse Score application as a play-along practicing tool.
Gergely’s passion for music and his dedication to growing the love of music in others are the biggest reasons why he teaches guitar and ukulele. His approach to teaching involves learning through play. The material he covers with his students is always delivered in a way that is highly interactive. Most of the assigned exercises he gives involve the elements of play that students can enjoy both in class and as homework.
Get to know Gergely…Beyond the Bio!
Coming soon!
Hobbies:
Musical influences:
Favourite food:
Least favourite food:
Favourite music:
Favourite album:
Favourite movie:
Favourite musical theatre/opera:
Best quote from your teacher:
Favourite quote:
Favourite book:
Latest Homework from Gergely
Is Gergely Your Teacher?
Sign up now to get your weekly assignments delivered, and never lose your homework sheet again!
Homework for June 3-10
Nova
Great work today! Here’s your homework:
Recommended minutes to practice: 15-20 per day
What to practice: Rich Man, Lightly Row, minor scales
How to practice:
Rich Man
– review timing/stacatto in bars 4 and 12; the bar is divided by two half notes, the staccato is beat 2 of the first half
– Review all staccato areas and make sure to do them (particularly bar 7)
– Dynamic contrast; use crescendos as your guide to dynamic changes
– Practice rhythmic changes for straight eighths, with crescendo
– Review bar 15; use rit to your advantage
– Practice transition between G octaves for bar 16
Lightly Row (p. 35 lesson book)
-start hands separate, when comfortable you can put hands together but don’t have to
-Be mindful of articulations (staccatos, slurs, slurred staccatos, detached notes)
-pay attention to movement/static in different voices in bar 4
How parents can support practice: Listen and guide as needed.
See you next week :)
Efe — May 30th
Hi Efe! Great seeing you today!
Here’s what to look at for this week.
— Gm (G minor) “jazzy” scale
- See the picture in this Google Drive. — The closest scale to this one is the Gm natural scale.
- As discussed in class, play around in this scale for fun. The only rule is don’t stray away from these notes or frets. — The red squares are the frets you’d play. Aside from this, the open strings G, B, and the high E string are part of this scale, too.
- The section highlighted in blue is of the area on the fretboard where you would be playing this scale.
- The section highlighted in purple is of the part of the scale that’s chromatic. That’s the rather funny part. This is where you can make a particularly jazzy sound with this scale.
- Here are 2 backing tracks that you can play along with. Jazz backing track 1. Jazz backing track 2. There are jazzy sounding chords in these; you’ll see some 7th chords, like we were discussing.
— Enter Sandman
- Its first “lick,” as us guitarists call it.
- See my Unlisted YouTube video of how to play it. Enter Sandman 1st lick.
- You’ll find the PDF of this in the Google Drive.
- How to practice this: 60% of your practice should be you playing it slowly (0.75x speed). 30% of it should be done at a somewhat higher speed (0.85x speed). 10% of it at full speed (1x speed). Going in this order— slowest to fastest. Adjust the speed with the YouTube widget to the appropriate speeds.
— Make sure you show your parents these Homework Posts every time you receive them anew.
- And please talk to your Dad to see if he can access the Client Comments. If it’s linked to his email, then he should have access to them.
- I’ll iron out yours and my scheduling questions at the school as soon as possible.
- You’ll hear from me on the Client Comments page very soon. So once you have access to it, please check that page everyday.
I may or may not see you in a week. Good luck in your exams! Talk again soon!
Efe — May 16th
Hi Efe!
Sorry to post this homework late. Here is what to look at.
What to listen to
— Django Reinhardt — Jazz guitarist
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cxQxajcOyCI — The 6.5 minute long video we saw last class. Rewatch this as something to more specifically remember what kinds of things you like in jazz guitar.
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RUmPhZpoFZU — This one’s a 12 minute long video. It has a number of examples of Reinhardt’s playing. Several other wonderful pieces are played here. (Audio only.)
I’m glad we’ve found that you like jazz guitar, Efe. We can definitely do some work on that kind of music next year. I would be happy to make simpler arrangements of jazz guitar music for you to play. Working on something like this is a plausible idea for your progress on the instrument next year.
Acoustic Open
- Continue to work on the first 16 bars. I saw some improvements today.
- Try the ending chords. Remember to make the last one cut completely short.
- If you have time, then keep going with the piece. Keep trying to play more and more of it. — Since there is no imminent performance goal, I’m not pushing super hard in terms of what you must learn. But one day, a good goal will be for you to memorize the piece.
Thanks Efe. An important reminder: I won’t be there this coming Saturday. We’ll get back to all of this on the following Saturday. Have a great two weeks and I’ll see you then!
Efe — May 9th
Hi Efe!
Here is what to look at for this week.
Artists to listen to
- Van Halen — Rock — Songs to try: Good Enough, Jump, Panama, Running with the Devil, Eruption, I’m the One, Jamie’s Crying, Atomic Punk, Ice cream man
- Joe Pass — Jazz — the link from today — We were about 1 minute in when you noticed a run on the guitar that you liked
- Django Reinhardt — Jazz — This man lost a finger on his left hand in a fire. And yet he still became a magnificent guitarist
Acoustic Open
- Continue to work on the first 16 bars. I saw some improvements today. — Make sure to try it without the video. Then do it with the video at 0.6x speed. I’ve slowed it down for this week. — If it is feeling super slow, raise the speed to 0.65x speed.
- Try the ending chords. Remember to make the last one cut completely short.
The above genres of music are full of countless things to discover and I hope those given songs inspire you to check out even more songs.
See you in a week!
Preferred Books for Gergely’s Students
Click to buy them here, and they’ll come right to your house! What could be easier?
Hal Leonard Guitar Method
The second edition of this world-famous method by Will Schmid and Greg Koch is preferred by teachers because it makes them more effective while making their job easier. Students enjoy its easy-to-follow format that gives them a solid music education while letting them play songs right away. Book 1 provides beginning instruction including tuning, 1st position melody playing, C, G, G7, D7, and Em chords, rhythms through eighth notes, solos and ensembles and strumming.


