OK, here's where some of the confusion lies for me. I never heard of "low pass filters" until I got into Alembic and Moog. I had never heard of the passive tone controls of a Fender bass (for instance) being referred to as low pass filters - until recently.
In the manual for the SF-2 (
here's the recent post linking to the manual), it states the following:
Why We Choose to FilterNatural acoustic instruments behave in large part as filters. All that statement means is that these filters tend to resonate in response to some signal - and acoustic instruments certainly do resonate. Low-pass filters are the closest electronic equivalent to these natural acoustic sounds.
This is precisely the reason we chose to use low-pass filters in our Alembic instruments. As a result, our instruments preserve the natural sound of the string's vibration and a variety of pleasing sounds are achieved. They were, in fact, the first active electronics ever to be used in guitars and basses.Now I understand that this passage isn't written in a technical manner. But to me it implies that Alembic's use of low-pass filters is a significant, new advance over the traditional method. It doesn't say what that traditional method is, but I would assume the standard tone control. So to me, this implies that the traditional tone control is not a low-pass filter, it is a different electronic method of sound manipulation that could be seen as similar to a low-pass filter, but different. Then again, in the final sentence they point out that this system is "the first active electronics" so you could read it as the active filter is the advancement.
There is also the issue of "resonance" which is emphasized in the manual. Resonance isn't adjustable in the standard passive tone control - maybe that's the key?
I wish I could blame this on it being the morning and my brain not working yet but if my brain's not working then it's been this way for 20 years! It could just be semantics, but I personally see the recent (?) use of "low pass filter" to describe the standard passive tone control as misleading, if not incorrect. Not sure that I'm correct in that though.