It definitely did!
The reason why rock and roll and Rock Music was sometimes called the devil's music back then is that it was way too loud and shocking for a generation growing up on mostly classical and jazz music. High volume levels came with the Electric Guitar, and while younger people loved it, some older people were totally against it, and there are still people today who just bash rock music for being too loud and noisy.
my plays in a band and is a lead guitar player, my concern is can he continue with this and do amps create any problems
No, your child cannot get shocked using an electric guitar. There is no electricity running through the guitar at any time.
The "wires" are called guitar chords or patch cables. And yes you can, if you have a guitar with an acoustic body (not an electric guitar, but acoustic or acoustic electric).
look for any damage to the neck and make sure the electronics work , plug it into an amplifier and see if it there's any problems.
it depends on the type of guitar you got bass or electric, any amp will work for electric guitar but not all amps work with electric bass.
yes you can get a blue electric guitar, to find where it is go to the nearest music shop or any catalogues and check if they have any blue colours ones, hope that helped
Every note is on an electric guitar, they happen to be the same notes as on any other guitar, and they are all over the fretboard. Low E,A,D,G,B,E
There is an online guitar pick designer at www.steveclayton.com, that allows you to create a custom guitar pick and then order it online from their website.
If the guitar itself has a microphone jack port, there should be no problems with using both at the same time.
i would not recommend altering your guitar in any way, because that could mess up the tuning and sound of your guitar
depends on the amplifier settings for electric vs acoustic. if neither guitar has any electricity going through it to the untrained ear all you will hear is a subtle difference in volume with an electric guitar plugged in and distortion more aggressive and fuzzy I guess would be a good way to put it.
Check your input on your guitar, or check your cable...