yes, it is a great amp with every guuitar, i have a shcetcer, but have used it with my strat....very versitalle amp
Yes, they are good entry level strat copy. look and sound great.
i currently own a Squier Standard Stratocaster, a Squier Affinity Strat, a Squier Jagmaster and an Epiphone Lucille. I have owned a Fender Standard Stratocaster in the past as well as a 90's Squier Stratocaster.all of that said, Squier's are very good guitars with bad reputations. having played and recorded for years now, i would say the Jagmaster is going to have a slightly higher build quality, and to me anyway, is just a bit more versatile. Jagmasters sound similar to an SG and have a short scale neck which i find very comfortable. very good clean and excellent distorted. and i love the stock pickups.the one thing a Jagmaster and no other guitar can sound like other than a Strat, is a Strat, and with the humbucker in the bridge position you can get Gibson-esque tones from it.i don't think you can go wrong with either, but a Jagmaster will handle metal and heavier stuff better and can still do surf and country, with more tonal choices. the Fat Strat will sound like a Strat, like Stevie or Jimi or The Band. neither is better to me just different. the Jagmaster is also more comfortable to me to play for longer periods of time than any guitar i own.Play a bunch and see what you like best. and as far as quality instruments go these are both very inexpensive, save up and buy both.
The Steer can sound like an LP or a Tele, even a Strat in the in between setting. It is very versatile, but best of all it really has its own tone. It sounds great through a Vox Night Train or AC15, and it takes pedals (as all guitars do...) I love mine.
Arachniana
Yes
Yes, they are good entry level strat copy. look and sound great.
(I currently use a fender strat with a floyd and humbuckers) i need a good metal second guitar with a similar feel to a fender strat
A great entry level guitar would be the Squier Strat by Fender, very reasonably priced and sound good, in fact, I've been playing guitar for 25 years and still use a Squier in some of my recordings!
A 15 watt Spider 3 amplifier is for practice, and in that capacity works fine with any good guitar -- including a Stratocaster or Epiphone. For a practice amplifier to use with a bass guitar, you would want to have at least 30 watts -- like a B-DEC 30.
The strat isn't as popular anymore among metal players because they use a 7.5 or 9 inch neck radius and single coil pickups. If you are playing classic rock or blues or something else with not alot of (if any) distortion and reletively low output then the strat would be comfortable and sound good.
a spelling business
That would depend on your appeal to comfort, aesthetics and sound... and maybe price. There are good Yamaha guitars, such as the Pacifica, which is a nice Fender Strat style. The Squier is the 22 fret strat Fender (I have a 22 fret Ibanez GIO) which is just as good as any guitar in my opinion, but a standard 24 fret is better for the high-pitching lead shredder (though only by one note).
spider man because the good guys always win
A spider monkey
Pretty cool.Actually some Spider-Mans from other dimensions or some of the Spider-Man costumes does have gadgets
fender for sure, i would just get a strat but whatever model you prefer would would work. other than that, a Gibson les paul would be insanely awsome if you could afford it.
i currently own a Squier Standard Stratocaster, a Squier Affinity Strat, a Squier Jagmaster and an Epiphone Lucille. I have owned a Fender Standard Stratocaster in the past as well as a 90's Squier Stratocaster.all of that said, Squier's are very good guitars with bad reputations. having played and recorded for years now, i would say the Jagmaster is going to have a slightly higher build quality, and to me anyway, is just a bit more versatile. Jagmasters sound similar to an SG and have a short scale neck which i find very comfortable. very good clean and excellent distorted. and i love the stock pickups.the one thing a Jagmaster and no other guitar can sound like other than a Strat, is a Strat, and with the humbucker in the bridge position you can get Gibson-esque tones from it.i don't think you can go wrong with either, but a Jagmaster will handle metal and heavier stuff better and can still do surf and country, with more tonal choices. the Fat Strat will sound like a Strat, like Stevie or Jimi or The Band. neither is better to me just different. the Jagmaster is also more comfortable to me to play for longer periods of time than any guitar i own.Play a bunch and see what you like best. and as far as quality instruments go these are both very inexpensive, save up and buy both.