depends on taste.
but for home use you should not turn the volume all the way up.
Pick it up, rest it on your lap with strings facing away from you and the head of the guitar to your left (if a right handed guitar and vice versa if left). Plug into an amplifier, turn on amplifier, strum the strings. You have used an electric guitar. You may also use it for wife beating.
Absolutely! Beware, however, that you will probably get unwanted feedback from the amplifier if you are using an electric/acoustic guitar. Acoustic amplifiers have circuitry built into them to help negate feedback.
There are many types of guitar effects and volume pedals. The cable from the guitar is plugged into the jack marked IN and another cable is plugged into the one labled OUT and then plugged into the Amplifier.
It is posible to fit an electric into an acoustic case. the case just has to be for a concert sized guitar. your electric may bump around a little in the case if its not paired up right though
Guitar amplifiers aren't designed to reproduce music properly. If it's the only amplifier you have, then turn off all compressors, reverb units and other effects that are in the signal chain. Guitar amplifiers normally color the sound and restrict both hig and low frequencies. You may be able to adjust them by increasing the high and low frequency gain if they are available. Also remember that guitar amplifiers are single channel so you will need to mix left and right signals together to hear the complete recording. Don't use a simple connector to link left and right together - it won't do the player outputs any good.
Pick it up, rest it on your lap with strings facing away from you and the head of the guitar to your left (if a right handed guitar and vice versa if left). Plug into an amplifier, turn on amplifier, strum the strings. You have used an electric guitar. You may also use it for wife beating.
Absolutely! Beware, however, that you will probably get unwanted feedback from the amplifier if you are using an electric/acoustic guitar. Acoustic amplifiers have circuitry built into them to help negate feedback.
If your asking which is better I would say an acoustic guitar. Because you don't have to buy an amplifier or anything like that you can just start playing and practicing right away.
There are many types of guitar effects and volume pedals. The cable from the guitar is plugged into the jack marked IN and another cable is plugged into the one labled OUT and then plugged into the Amplifier.
It is posible to fit an electric into an acoustic case. the case just has to be for a concert sized guitar. your electric may bump around a little in the case if its not paired up right though
Stuart A. Goldberg has written: 'The compleat book of right hand strums for folk and electric guitar' -- subject(s): Electric guitar, Guitar, Methods, Self-instruction
can be any shape or brand even the cheapest guitar with two humbuckers, heavy gauge strings and a low tuning through an amplifier with the right amount of distortion.
Guitar amplifiers aren't designed to reproduce music properly. If it's the only amplifier you have, then turn off all compressors, reverb units and other effects that are in the signal chain. Guitar amplifiers normally color the sound and restrict both hig and low frequencies. You may be able to adjust them by increasing the high and low frequency gain if they are available. Also remember that guitar amplifiers are single channel so you will need to mix left and right signals together to hear the complete recording. Don't use a simple connector to link left and right together - it won't do the player outputs any good.
Yes, but make sure you get the right amplifier settings, if you play through an amplifier. Some guitars will do this better than others. If you want that traditional acoustic sound, pay attention to woods such as mahogany which is great for it. *use string brands to your advantage , some are more mellow sounding as well *play with your fingers for that true flamenco sound *most importantly learn some Spanish or whatever guitar scales you see fit. Scales can be intimidating at first and we can assume we don't need them but they go a very long way. See the related link for further information.
think of it this way why does a singer need a microphone to amplify their vocals. without the electricity flowing through the hardware inside the guitar it's just a really fancy looking or expensive acoustic guitar!
i would double pick and rest your right hand on the bridge
If you mean YOUR guitar, then I have no clue. But all guitars are different and you will just need to chop and change until you find the right one with the right sound