different between acousmatic vs electroacoustic
acousmatic
English
Etymology
From Latin acousmaticus, from Ancient Greek ???????????? (akousmatikós), from ????? (akoú?, “I hear”).
Adjective
acousmatic (not comparable)
- Referring to a sound that has no visually identifiable cause.
- Referring to Pythagorean disciples who for years listened to his lectures from behind a curtain, unable to see him.
- (music) Referring to pre-recorded music that is presented in concert using loudspeakers, e.g. some types of computer music.
Translations
References
- acousmatic on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- EARS: ElectroAcoustic Resource Site
acousmatic From the web:
electroacoustic
English
Etymology
electro- +? acoustic
Adjective
electroacoustic (comparative more electroacoustic, superlative most electroacoustic)
- Of or pertaining to electroacoustics
Synonyms
- acoustoelectric
Translations
Anagrams
- acoustoelectric
electroacoustic From the web:
- what electroacoustic transducer
- what is electroacoustic music
- electro acoustic guitar
- what is electroacoustic analysis
- what does electroacoustic mean
- what defines electroacoustic
- what is electroacoustic sound
- what is electroacoustic effect
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