Honestly it depends on the guitar but most fender Guitars are very good quality. Fender was voted the number 3 highest quality electric guitars in the world. It is behind Gibson and marsall.
You can learn any songs opn any guitars. PS. Stagg guitars are bad quality. Go for something slighty more expensive. Epiphone will give you a similar sound.
Much of the sound quality achieved by electric guitars (including tone, resonance and sustain) are achieved not only by the strings but by the quality of materials used in the guitar itself. The quality of it's build is also taken into account. Cracks in the body will cause a noticeable drop in sound quality. As well as this, cracks can obviously increase the chance of your guitar breaking or snapping.
After Leo Fender sold Fender to CBS he stayed on as a design consultant and created the 3-Bolt neck with tilt adjustment as an improvement over the original 4 bolt neck that had no tilt adjustment other than using shims. Fender CBS's production quality, specifically the mismatch of the neck pocket size to the neck heel, resulted in an unstable neck attachment much of the time and gave the 3 bolt neck a bad reputation. Leo later proved the 3 bolt neck worked if done properly with his G&L guitars.
Yes.
[ First of all, sorry for my bad english. I'm from Brazil. ] In the early years, she used a student model Rickenbacker. http://www.rickbeat.com/modelslibrary/450/Rickenbacker%20450%20-%20Front.jpg Then, she got a Fender Jazzmaster. http://www.darrenriley.com/images/66jazzmaster.JPG And co-designed her own model... (Squier Venus) http://www.harmony-central.com/Events/SNAMM97/Fender/Venus.jpg (Note that the Venus she played differed in several aspects from the signature model, from the pickups to the headstock shape. Really different.) Nowadays she's more into the Fender Stratocaster, I guess. At least, was the last guitar I saw her playing. But if you want to know the guitars she played to sound like Hole sounded, you should look for the guitars Eric Erlanderson played, he was the main guitar player in the band. Fender Telecaster, Fender Jaguar and the vintage Veleno made out of aluminum was his main gear. That's all I could remember. Hopefully it will help you. Again, sorry for all the grammatic & stuff.
A good quality bass is at minimum 300$, now not to say a bass under that is bad, bass guitars depend on what genre you play. Example, Fender is a good punk rock bass, but I have a classic Fender P-Bass at 210$. it is an amazing punk bass for the price. So I personally wouldn't relate a bass to money and quality, some bass guitars are good for some kinds of music, and some are not. Find out what genre you like, and buy a recommended bass for that genre.
You can learn any songs opn any guitars. PS. Stagg guitars are bad quality. Go for something slighty more expensive. Epiphone will give you a similar sound.
Much of the sound quality achieved by electric guitars (including tone, resonance and sustain) are achieved not only by the strings but by the quality of materials used in the guitar itself. The quality of it's build is also taken into account. Cracks in the body will cause a noticeable drop in sound quality. As well as this, cracks can obviously increase the chance of your guitar breaking or snapping.
It's not bad.
After Leo Fender sold Fender to CBS he stayed on as a design consultant and created the 3-Bolt neck with tilt adjustment as an improvement over the original 4 bolt neck that had no tilt adjustment other than using shims. Fender CBS's production quality, specifically the mismatch of the neck pocket size to the neck heel, resulted in an unstable neck attachment much of the time and gave the 3 bolt neck a bad reputation. Leo later proved the 3 bolt neck worked if done properly with his G&L guitars.
Yes.
that everybody cannot be eric clapton
Of course you can. You can also put Fender strings on a Gibson. Nothing bad will happen. Just make any necessary truss rod adjustments if you are putting different gauge strings on a guitar.
No too bad i like mine
[ First of all, sorry for my bad english. I'm from Brazil. ] In the early years, she used a student model Rickenbacker. http://www.rickbeat.com/modelslibrary/450/Rickenbacker%20450%20-%20Front.jpg Then, she got a Fender Jazzmaster. http://www.darrenriley.com/images/66jazzmaster.JPG And co-designed her own model... (Squier Venus) http://www.harmony-central.com/Events/SNAMM97/Fender/Venus.jpg (Note that the Venus she played differed in several aspects from the signature model, from the pickups to the headstock shape. Really different.) Nowadays she's more into the Fender Stratocaster, I guess. At least, was the last guitar I saw her playing. But if you want to know the guitars she played to sound like Hole sounded, you should look for the guitars Eric Erlanderson played, he was the main guitar player in the band. Fender Telecaster, Fender Jaguar and the vintage Veleno made out of aluminum was his main gear. That's all I could remember. Hopefully it will help you. Again, sorry for all the grammatic & stuff.
yes, but dean guitars are only for if you play hard rock or metal music. There basses aren't half bad either.
A Squier Stratocaster is a fairly versatile guitar and is not too difficult to play.It depends on what style of music you want to play but you cannot rewally go wrong with a stratocaster. If you can afford a Fender strat then that would be nicer to play than a Squier and should stay in tune better too.