New linear scale. Made in python. . . 200hz up to 2000hz and back in steps of 100hzi'm not that convinced the beep command outputs exact frequencies. . . And the sound is terrible. But it is a beep. . .
A simple 440 hz tone (sine) created in audacity. Or at least that's what it's supposed to be. . . For some reason, when i uploaded it, it sounded all distorted.
Two descending tones. Made in garageband. Used for a production of sideways stories from wayside school for the "video intercom", this is the sound it made when it went out. Edit: i see a lot of people are enjoying this sound! if you'd like to donate a dollar or two towards my personal starving artist fund here is a donation link: https://www. Paypal. Me/baharv89.
I'm note sure where or when i recorded this, but it features a number of interesting and useful sounds. It opens with a nice tone, and features various evocative scenes.
I generated four square tones with increasing silence in between with audacity. The tones are the c major scale. It is very useful in old video games when you win or do something good.
A very low frequency tone/drone made with the studiofactory software synth. It's a cross-mod of the perlin tone generator with a formant generator. This is about as low and loud as my current speaker/amplifier system allows. Use with care i. E. Turn down your playback systems output before you play it. Final mastering was done with audacity.
Bach's "overture (suite) no. 2 in b minor bwv 1067: vii. Badinerie" converted into an 8-bit, chip-tune ringtone. It makes a perfect loop, so it is great for call ring-tone.
I wanted to make a very gentle wakeup alarm for my android phone. It's a 25-minute long fade in of a pure 3-khz tone. Created with audacity. I encoded this to ogg vorbis for personal use, but i'm sure you can do this better for yourself (maybe you'll prefer other format), so here you have a quality flac file for source.