The sound is coming from the fans of a server. By pulling out one of the fans, all other fans turn up to 100%. The microphone is located above the air duct exactly in the middle of the case and thus between two fan fronts. The soundfile starts with the fans on standard speed. After a few seconds the fans turn up to 100%. I left them there for a few seconds and then quietly plugged the removed fan back in. This fan now also switches to 100% - this is the single, delayed "speed up" that can be heard from second 35. About 10 seconds later, all fans return to normal speed. Unfortunately, a colleague came in at that time and ended up talking into the recording. Due to lack of time, i was unfortunately unable to repeat the audio that day, but will certainly do another re-recording in the future. Feel free to use the sound; no attribution required. Feel free to write me in the comments what you used the sound for. Equipment:røde lavalier microphonesound devices mixpre-3 ii. File:wavmono96 khz32-bit float.
This sound i made with a python script. The script simulates a 2d-network of 13x13 identical masses connected with springs. I 'feed' one mass in a corner of the network with a 'chirp' of 400-2000 hz for one second and the system resonates at its characteristic frequencies. I 'listen' to the resonating system in the adjacent corner. The decay of the sound was build in, but the last half second i edited the volume to zero. The code took a few hours to execute. You may want to change the picture of this sound to the frequency-domain. Yo! awesome! nerd-pride! :-).
A crowd growing in cheer at busch stadium - st. Louis cardinals vs. Chicago cubs. Features distant cheering and a few seconds of a conversation within a close proximity.
Robert Schumann, Album für die Jugend, Op. 68, Nr. 10: "Fröhlicher Landmann, von der Arbeit zurückkehrend" ("Happy Farmer, Returning from Work"), 37 seconds
Description de base:. First try in audacity, sound 1. 3 seconds. Typologie:. Continu tonique. Masse: son seul tonique. Timbre harmonique: clair. Grain: lisse. Allure: pas de vibrato.
This sound is a mix between me walking in the grass and me riding book. I applied an echo of 3 seconds with a 4 factor. Moreover, i add an adjustable melted at the beginning of the sound.
Single hit of a vibraslap. Original file duplicated and processed with delay on one channel panned hard left and reverb on the second channel panned hard right. Hit moves nicely across the stereo field.
A woman sobbing. Short and medium sobs. Up close, varying amounts of her voice squeaking and "oh" sounds. Not hysterical. Second set is higher in pitch.
This is my second alarm recording produced with lmms (ami evan) then imported in audacity where i recorded my own voice and added a vocoder to make it sound more robotic.
A 34 second manipulation of two different sound clips. One is a man speaking in cherokee and the other is a rainstick. Both sounds came from the examples provided with cycling74's max/msp.
Two sets of 4 clear, wooden door knocks, first faster than the second. Happy to give back to the community after so many years of downloads with the few good foleys i've done.
A large gas weed torch burning for several seconds. Could make a good flamethrower sound. Recorded: august 2014, with android voice recorder (mono), outdoors/backyard in the afternoon.
Besides being an inspiration since man first explored her, the ancient mississippi river is also a highway for many coal-carrying barges. For this recording my zoom h4n was on the soft, powdery sandy bank about 60 feet from the river…you hear the gentle, but powerful thrumming of the giant diesel engines as a huge, 200 foot barge passes by. Some notable natural sounds are a very clear red-wing blackbird at 20 seconds in, and again at one mine in and again at one-minute 13 seconds into it. You hear a wonderful, clear splash at 27 seconds into as well. Recording made around 4pm on a warm -- 80 degrees -- june day. Close your eyes, dig into the powdery, soft sand of the mississippi river bank and float away on a warm summer day.
5 second sine-wave (loop) generated in soundforge. 16 bit 44. 100 hz. Wav file. Part of a pack inspired by the "colundi everyone" poster. Free to use as you like.
For this track, i used a rhythm pist for ten seconds. Then in the middle i created a sound that i put the sound down to show that sometimes time can flies so fast for someone and slower for someone else.
This is the noise the pedestrian scramble crossing lights make. They beep at intervals one seconds each. I recorded this at the scramble located at the intersection of university ave. And union st w. In queens' university.