Caprice No 24
While electric guitarists have to lug around a large amp and assorted wires the lowly foot stool is just about all the classical guitarist needs. An adjustable one runs around $15. Foot stools are great for jazz guitarists too. Usually you'll see a jazz guitarist sitting with his legs crossed to raise the thigh enough to rest the guitar on or else sitting on a chair hunched over. Try a foot stool instead.
A guitar by any other name would still be a guitar (sort of)
sound hole, head—and the fact that it is non-amplified
(though of course it can be easily
modified with a pick up) has more in common with the classic
guitar than with the electric. The plectrum guitar is either flat- or
arch-topped. In the first one the strings are fastened to and end on the
bridge; in the second the strings go over the bridge nut and are secured to a
metal brace (like that on a violin).

This is great. Print out blank sheets in a variety of types, along with clefs. You can also print out tab sheets. And you can do it in various sizes.
Blank Sheet MusicNow this is interesting. It's called the Concertto for Electric Guitar and Orchestra by Pete Fine.
Click here The link has three short excerpts in quicktime. It sort of sounds like themes from one of those Italian westerns.
I always hated playing scales. My teacher used the Segovia scale book, with the scales in different positions, up and down the fingerboard, in free stroke, in rest stroke. Every time I had to play a scale it was like getting ready to receive an injection from the dentist. But now, years later, I've begun to play them for relaxation. It's like a musical form of ommmmm or something. Every time I play a scale now I can feel my blood pressure get lower and lower...