Music, asked by Anonymous, 9 months ago

what is difference between Acapella and Filtered Acapella​

Answers

Answered by minakshipawan0325
6

What's the difference between acoustic and acapella?

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These terms have nothing to do with each other.

Acoustic in music involves anything to do with sound, usually used when you are trying to adjust your sound to the “acoustic environment” you are in. Some environments are full of echos, like a cathedral or a gymnasium; others, like a sound studio, suppress echoes and supply artificial echo through the equipment!

An acoustic instrument is one that produces sound without electronic help. Guitars, Pianos, actual metal drums, and anything in a symphony orchestra is an acoustic instrument. Your voice is an acoustic instrument. Even when you use a “pickup” to run the sound of an acoustic guitar through an amp to make it louder, we still say the guitar is acoustic. An electric guitar is a different beast. The only thing acoustic about it is the string itself, and maybe a little resonance from the plank of wood the string is attached to - but most of the tone is made electronically, and can be modified through any number of pedals and knobs and other gizmos. A “keyboard” is an electronic device - its sounds are produced digitally. To play loud, it has velocity sensors in each key. At a finger’s touch, you can change its tone from a piano to an organ to a vibraharp. An electric (Hammond) or electronic (all other brands) of organ is non-acoustic. The tone originates electronically, except for the very faint acoustic sound of the tone-wheels in a Hammond.

A capella is about singing, and it’s an Italian phrase which means “as you would in The Chapel.” The reference is to the Sistine Chapel, the Michelangelo-ceiling chapel, which is too small to fit an orchestra, so singers always sang there without instruments. So since around 1600 or so, all singing without instruments is called “a capella.”

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