The Japanese word stems from the words kara, meaning "empty" and oke which is short meant for o-kesutora, meaning "orchestra". The words together create a contraction literally meaning "empty orchestra". Karaoke music tracks includes only the song's music, and never the vocals. Karaoke
Thanks for the education. I went to music school, but since it was a classical program, I never got to learn much about the history or karaoke. All I knew is that it was Japanese. Thanks for reading my post & watching my video. :) For anyone checking out this comment. The link is to a website that reviews karaoke equipment.
The Japanese word stems from the words kara, meaning "empty" and oke which is short meant for o-kesutora, meaning "orchestra". The words together create a contraction literally meaning "empty orchestra". Karaoke music tracks includes only the song's music, and never the vocals. Karaoke
ReplyDeleteThanks for the education. I went to music school, but since it was a classical program, I never got to learn much about the history or karaoke. All I knew is that it was Japanese. Thanks for reading my post & watching my video. :) For anyone checking out this comment. The link is to a website that reviews karaoke equipment.
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