The cap prevents DC produced by the electronics to go backwards into the pickup. The pickup by itself cannot produce DC. If you want to complain about that, dig up Michael Faraday.I am assuming that the resistor to ground is meant to bias the op-amp's input to reduce noise, and the capacitor is there to eliminate any DC that might be induced or produced by the pickup?
In many amps, the resistor sets the load impedance seen by the pickup. This affects the signal's frequency and transient response. The lower the impedance, the greater the high-frequency roll-off of the signal. The system is basically a voltage divider with a series inductor and a shunt resistor. Because of the inductor's frequency/impedance characteristic, the overall circuit is a lowpass filter.
Separate from that, the cap also is in series with the pickup inductance. Depending on exactly where the cap is in the circuit, this can act as a high-pass filter.
Messy.
ak


