Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Son de rot. Son enregistré avec un zoom h4n pro. Sound of burp. Sound recorded with a zoom h4n pro. My sounds are licensed under the creative commons 0 license but it would be a pleasure for me to hear your work so doesn’t hesitate to comment or to send me a message with your work :).
This is a small fragment of a human whistling in a special way, with tongue touching the top front teeth (leaving opening for air to flow), producing a sound that resembles a panflute.
Lol i know i have a lot of these. . . I narrate audiobooks and stuff that i've written, and i figure, ya know, since i got them, why not keep them for cartoons or something? no two belches are exactly the same!.
Lol i know i have a lot of these. . . I narrate audiobooks and stuff that i've written, and i figure, ya know, since i got them, why not keep them for cartoons or something? no two belches are exactly the same!.
Lol i know i have a lot of these. . . I narrate audiobooks and stuff that i've written, and i figure, ya know, since i got them, why not keep them for cartoons or something? no two belches are exactly the same!.
Lol i know i have a lot of these. . . I narrate audiobooks and stuff that i've written, and i figure, ya know, since i got them, why not keep them for cartoons or something? no two belches are exactly the same!.
Lol i know i have a lot of these. . . I narrate audiobooks and stuff that i've written, and i figure, ya know, since i got them, why not keep them for cartoons or something? no two belches are exactly the same!.
Just for test the new interface of freesound upload files i record tis sound, it's my first atemt to record something in uncompressed wav format in my dm-520.
Drag & drop of heavy metal poles in an empty car park with more than 8 seconds of natural reverb. Recorded location :théâtre-auditorium de poitiers-francerecorded with a couple of neumann km184 directly in protools via an m-box.
I had a need for some burps in a project, and decided to burp loudly into the mic whenever the urge arose while i was narrating. Beer aided the process quite a bit. These were collected over the course of several stories. I've studiously avoided sniffing my pop-filter, for obvious reasons. Mic is a rode procaster. Not that i think it is necessarily the microphone of choice for belching. Feel free to use the sound for whatever purpose you like.