The calendar is part of the catalog
FilteredTube's shelves are season-aware. In sefira and the Three Weeks, acapella and vocal-appropriate music are a search away, and seasonal chips surface exactly when the calendar calls for them — never out of season.
Standards inside standards
The same written standard governs year-round; the calendar adds its layer honestly. What shows in Av differs from what shows in Adar — automatically.
Families tell us the counting weeks are exactly when an approved catalog earns its keep: the music question answers itself, and the app quietly swaps its own shelves to match halachic season. When sefira ends, the full catalog returns as it was — favorites intact, playlists untouched, queue where you left it. It is a small feature with a large message: the calendar is not a decoration here; it is part of the law of the product. Membership stays the same year-round: $5.99 a month single, $9.99 for three accounts, $14.99 for six, streaming only.
The same layer serves the Three Weeks: vocal-appropriate selections surface, the rest waits, and nobody has to remember the calendar — the app already did.
At a glance
Key takeaways
- Season-aware shelves know sefira from simcha season.
- Acapella findable instantly when the calendar calls.
- One standard year-round; the calendar layers on top.
Continue with FilteredTube
Explore the focused player.
Search Torah and Jewish music inside the reviewed FilteredTube experience, or read how official embeds and licensed media remain separate.