o.07
The term acoustic, albeit not neccessarily accurate, usually implies a guitar with steel strings, whereas classical implies the use of nylon strings. For playing almost all types of modern music, a guitar with steel strings is preferred.
There are several fingerings for g minor on a guitar. One simple one is the first three (highest) strings on fret three, playing only those three strings. One harder one is the full g minor chord in barred form. That is with one finger (index) on all strings at fret three, with two fingers (usually ring and picky) on strings 4 and 5 at fret 5. (That is an e minor chord barred up three frets.)
An Electric Guitar has a couple main parts. A neck, a body, fret board, action, bridge, pickups and the usually two tone dials, volume, some have whammy bars. Here is a link to a somewhat cheap begginers guitar. http://www.target.com/Electric-Guitar-Dummies-Combo-KEFD39PK/dp/B000R9K2B6/sr=1-12/qid=1226353830/ref=sr_1_12/189-6764421-4003008?ie=UTF8&index=target&rh=k%3Aelectric%20guitars&page=1
its smaller than a 1 and bigger than a two quarter
Yes you can and they will work fine, the tone will be affected. The steel strings for an electric guitar (steel so they interact with the magnets on the pickup) will not sound as full and rich as the bronze strings designed for acoustic. In a pinch, they will work just fine! (but not visa-versa because of the magnet thing).
guitar, violin and piano
body neck strings
boo
The term acoustic, albeit not neccessarily accurate, usually implies a guitar with steel strings, whereas classical implies the use of nylon strings. For playing almost all types of modern music, a guitar with steel strings is preferred.
Classical guitar strings are mainly made out of nylon. Different thickness of the strings allows for differences in tension. Today, string makers are also experimenting with a mixture of carbon and nylon which allows for thinner strings and adds more clarity to the tone. Carbon strings tend to be brighter in tone than the pure nylon strings. Bass strings (lower three strings in a set) have the same nylon core, but they are additionally wrapped with a silver-plated coper wire. Electric guitar strings use the similar process, but with steel instead of nylon. There is a great video on Discovery/Science channel website ("How it's made") that shows the entire process of making steel strings for guitar.
Electric bass, electric guitar, and electric piano :)
The vibrating metal guitar string moves in a magnetic field that creates a signal that gets picked up by the wire coil inside the pick ups. As long as the guitar is plugged in, this amplifies the sound.
the electric guitar.4 string bass
There are several fingerings for g minor on a guitar. One simple one is the first three (highest) strings on fret three, playing only those three strings. One harder one is the full g minor chord in barred form. That is with one finger (index) on all strings at fret three, with two fingers (usually ring and picky) on strings 4 and 5 at fret 5. (That is an e minor chord barred up three frets.)
An Electric Guitar has a couple main parts. A neck, a body, fret board, action, bridge, pickups and the usually two tone dials, volume, some have whammy bars. Here is a link to a somewhat cheap begginers guitar. http://www.target.com/Electric-Guitar-Dummies-Combo-KEFD39PK/dp/B000R9K2B6/sr=1-12/qid=1226353830/ref=sr_1_12/189-6764421-4003008?ie=UTF8&index=target&rh=k%3Aelectric%20guitars&page=1
Guitar has three main parts: guitar body, neck, and a head. Guitar head has tuning pegs which are used to tighten the strings. Guitar neck has frets which are used to shorten the string and produce different pitches. Guitar body is where the sound is produced. Guitar body has three main parts: the top (soundboard), back, and sides. The top has additional different parts: sound hole (a cutout in the body through which the sound comes out), rosette (does not have any sound-producing purpose, but ornaments the sound hole), bridge (holds the strings on the lower side), and saddle (transfers the vibrations from the strings to the soundboard).
its smaller than a 1 and bigger than a two quarter