Yes, You Do need something else to hook up a acoustic Guitars to an amplifier. There are many ways to do this, you can build your own pick up. The internet has many websites showing you how to do this. But, If you are not into building one yourself. You can buy one online, I bought the Seymour Duncan sound hole pickup online. I think it cost me 35 dollars. Well, hope this helps.
I think you can
Yes, gear4music is a website where you can purchase musical instruments for a cheap price. Their products include, guitars, electric guitars, drum kits, digital pianos, etc.
I called the company directly with the same question. Dean says all acoustic guitars are "sourced" (I guess that means "made in") from China and Korea. Just like everybody else when spending less that $1,500 or so. Yes, even Taylor, Breedlove and Martin. The US labor market can't produce an american made instrument unless the list price is above $1,500
Electric guitars need amps. Amps provide the sound that electric guitars are made to produce. Without the amp, you do not get any sound except vibrating strings. ======================= Not necessarily. Many electric guitars -- especially hollowbodies -- have sound chambers and sound holes, so they'd make acoustic sounds as well. But obviously, if you want the "normal" electric-guitar sounds, you'd need an amplifier. Some guitars actually come with an amplifier built-in, such as the Fernandes Nomad. Others designed for practice can be played with headphones, such as the Traveler guitar.
Meaning of an Acoustic SongAn 'acoustic' version of a song is when a band/artist makes an acoustic recording of their song (Usually one of their hit songs). In most cases they use only acoustic guitars and nothing else. They may use bongos or other percussion instruments. They use as little vocal effects and usually make a more mellow, sound. It's similar to playing live. It almost always has to demonstrate good vocal technique and have a slow tempo because without any additional sound, the vocals are very important.
It's made of wood, what else?
Grand Auditorium body style has the width and depth of a dreadnought. Its narrower waist gives it the appearance of a smaller instrument, adds treble "zing" across the guitar's tonal spectrum. The waist sharpens the definition of individual notes, and also enables it to rest comfortably in the lap. With less mass from the width of the braces, the guitar top moves faster, resulting in a snappy, bell-like tone.
deosent need electric..
it depends on existing amplifier or not , if after antenna there's an amplifier it called active else it called passive which less sensitive that active .
No research something else!!! No research something else!!! No research something else!!!
Max Papas has: Played Frank in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Tim in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Courtroom Assistant in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Detective Bashkin in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Gangly Man in "Something Else" in 2004. Played The Internet in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Mr. Fantastik in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Marty in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Black Manta in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Naked Guy in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Timmy in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Salty Grandpa in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Culture Club Leader in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Various in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Narrator in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Baron Zero in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Professor in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Stan Lee in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Late Student in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Edgar Milton in "Something Else" in 2004. Played Person in "Something Else" in 2004.
"Concert" tuning is the same on standard electric and acoustic guitars: EADGBE. No one says you can't tune either type of guitar to something else. However, there are multiple types of electric and acoustic guitars, for example: - 12-string guitar (EADGBE, then EADG high octaves and BE unison strings) - 7-string guitar (BEADGBE, or EADGBE with high-octave G) - baritone guitar (BEADGB) - tenor guitar (CGDA, DGBE and other variations) - Nashville tuning (EADGBE, but with EADG as high octaves -- basically a 12-string without the "normal" strings) - short-scale guitar (eg. Tacoma Papoose, which is tuned ADGCEA)