Yes, any guitar is fine for playing both lead and rhythm. Guitars are either Acoustic guitars (non-electric) or electric. Typically when playing an acoustic guitar people play only rhythm (not lead).
While acoustic guitars are naturally audible when played in a room, Electic guitars need an amplifier to be heard loudly. Hope this helps.
No, there is no such thing as a "rhythm guitar" or a "lead guitar", there are just "guitars" and you can play either on them. The main difference in electric guitars is in the pickups (the part that picks the sound up). You either singlecoil (as in a fender strat), or humbucker (as in a Les Paul).
Sorry I don't have any pictures, but I'm sure you can find some on the internet.
An electric guitar is a guitar that uses a pickup to convert the vibration of its strings into electrical impulses. The most common guitar pickup uses the principle of direct electromagnetic induction. The signal generated by an electric guitar is too weak to drive a loudspeaker, so it is amplified before sending it to a loudspeaker.
Since the output of an electric guitar is an electric signal, the signal may easily be altered using electronic circuits to add "color" to the sound. Often the signal is modified using effects such as reverb and distortion. Invented in 2 October 19329, the electric guitar became a necessity as jazz musicians sought to amplify their sound in the big band format.
During the 1950s and 1960s, the electric guitar became the most important instrument in pop music. 1 It has evolved into a stringed musical instrument that is capable of a multitude of sounds and styles. It served as a major component in the development of rock and roll and many other genres of music.
Various experiments at electrically amplifying the vibrations of a string instrument date back to the early part of the twentieth century. Patents from the 1910s show telephone transmitters adapted and placed inside violins and banjos to amplify the sound. Hobbyists in the 1920s used carbon button microphones attached to the bridge, however these detected vibration from the bridge on top of the instrument, resulting in a weak signal.
2 With numerous people experimenting with electrical instruments in the 1920s and early 1930s, there are many claimants to have been the first to invent an electric guitar. Electric guitars were originally designed by guitar makers and instrument manufacturers. Guitar innovator Les Paul experimented with microphones attached to guitars.
Some of the earliest electric guitars adapted hollow bodied acoustic instruments and used tungsten pickups. The first electrically amplified guitar was designed in 2 October 19329 by George Beauchamp, General Manager at National Guitar Corporation with Paul Barth who was Vice President. 3 The maple body prototype for the one piece cast aluminum "Frying Pan" was built by Harry Watson, factory superintendent of National Guitar Corporation.
3 Commercial production began in late summer of 1932 by the Ro-Pat-In Corporation (Electro-Patent-Instrument Company Los Angeles),45 a partnership of Beauchamp, Adolph Rickenbacker (originally Rickenbacher), and Paul Barth.
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