Nylon Or steel are best for acoustic but i would recommend having nylon strings on classical guitar rather than acoustic.
Your best bet would be to by a "pitch shifter" pedal. I wouldn't recommend trying to tune it up an octave.
Not a good idea. The classical guitar is made for nylon strings that put less tension on the bridge than the steel strings used for standard acoustic guitars. It would most likely pull the bridge off the guitar.
a synthesizer pedal my favorite if the electro-harmonix H.O.G P.S- the unit costs around $450, but if i were you i would spend an extra $105 to buy the 6 channel footswitch that lets you save in 6 different settings that you like, cause it is nearly impossible to find that exact setting again
A classical guitar IS an acoustic guitar. Now, if you are asking, "How can I make a classical guitar sound like a steel-string flattop guitar", the answer is: You can't. The only way you could approach that is to put steel strings on the classical guitar, and if you do that, you WILL, not "maybe", FOR SURE, destroy the guitar. In fact, the bridge may pop completely off the guitar while you are tuning up for the first time. If you want steel-string sound, get a steel-string acoustic. Please don't ruin a perfectly good classical trying to get that sound. This is 45 years of being a guitarist talking, here.
There are several music stores in local towns that would sell a Boss DS1 guitar pedal. Online, a website such as Amazon will have a guitar pedal for purchase.
I would say a Wah Wah pedal and some type of distortion.
Steel, most likely, though the steel ones might mess up your pick sooner than you would like!
Has Roger Daltrey been playing it?
Making it out of cheese simply would not produce the same tone.
no they use more up to date electric guitars
A lap steel guitar is a slightly rare variant on a normal guitar. As the name suggests it is played by laying the guitar on the lap and playing it with a slide instead of fretting it with fingers. It could perhaps be sourced from a local guitar shop, however due to its rarity you might have to go to a specialist shop. The staff in the local guitar shop will be able to direct. If in London though, there is a street called Denmark street in central London which is filled with music shops. It would be easy to locate a lap steel guitar here.
Nylon Or steel are best for acoustic but i would recommend having nylon strings on classical guitar rather than acoustic.
I would not advise this because most classical, or nylon string guitars do not have the steel reinforcing rod in the neck of the guitar that the steel string guitars have.
Your best bet would be to by a "pitch shifter" pedal. I wouldn't recommend trying to tune it up an octave.
Not a good idea. The classical guitar is made for nylon strings that put less tension on the bridge than the steel strings used for standard acoustic guitars. It would most likely pull the bridge off the guitar.
space notes as in like all pink floyd or "galactic" type stuff that aliens would? You'll need a chorus or flange pedal for this. Your best bet is to get a guitar processor or modeling amp with it in it.