Absolutely. Will your degree say, "BA in Guitar", no, but you can major in music and play your instrument of choice. The problem you will run into is that a music degree will not do much for you unless you want to teach music. If you want to be a musician, you stand the same chance of playing music for a career with or without a degree. Music would make a stronger minor than a major, but you can definitely play guitar in college (be prepared to learn classical).
No
I would like to. But they don't need a new guitarist.
Mike is a huge Rolling Stones fan but has said that the reason he dropped out of college and became a guitarist is because of Stevie Ray Vaughan.
OK Go was formed in 1998 by lead vocalist and guitarist Damian Kulash, vocalist and bass guitarist Tim Nordwind, drummer and percussionist Dan Konopka, and former member, who was another guitarist and the first keyboardist of the band, Andy Duncan, who was later replaced by guitarist and keyboardist Andy Ross in 2005 when Duncan left OK Go.
Go to the Internet Movie Database (IMDB) and look up the word guitarist as a plot description. Then count all the movies that are about the life of a guitarist. You have to do some work if you want the answer.
Guitarist is a noun, so you would use it as a subject or (in)direct object of a clause and would go either before or after the verb. It is used to show one's occupation so the sentence would probably go "John is a guitarist".
According to the online proclamation by the Governor of Alabama declaring August 3, 2007 "Jeff Cook Day," Alabama guitarist attended Gadsden State Community College in Gadsden, Alabama where he earned an electronics degree.
Gotta go with the original. Ritchie Blackmore.
He is a guitarist but I don't think that he is that famous guitarist.
Guitarist = gitarist
No. The word guitarist's is a possessive noun (of or belonging to a guitarist). There is no adverb form.
he did not go to college