Microfone condensador akg c414gravado para a disciplina de captação de audio do curso radio tv e internet, universidade anhembi morumbi, são paulo - brasil.
A repetitive beat created by scratching into the lock groove of a vinyl record and recorded. Sounds further filtered and modified in ableton. Made for a demonstration at loyola high school for a music appreciation course.
Sound of velcro fastener on shoes (specialized bike shoes). Sound recorded with a zoom h4n pro. Son d’un scratch sur des chaussures (chaussures de vélo specialized). Son enregistré avec un 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 sound of finger scratching and its characteristic in the gesture analysis works from the taln group (upf). In taln different aspects of natural language processing are being done. Learn more at: https://www. Upf. Edu/web/taln.
Sound of velcro fastener on shoes (specialized bike shoes). Sound recorded with a zoom h4n pro. Son d’un scratch sur des chaussures (chaussures de vélo specialized). Son enregistré avec un 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 :).
Sorry about the background noise dx, anyways this is my mii singing "do do de do". I recorded this for a funny remix of a project then shared it here!.
The sound of a homemade uncoated piezo-contact mic being rubbed against a giant fan. Sounds kind of creepy and weird, and the rubber around the edge of the mic caused it to bounce and make a bouncy kind of sound. Neat! zoom h4n.
This is a long sample of me hitting, scratching and rolling all sorts of stones against one another, somewhere in the moroccan desert. The sounds are pretty good quality, recorded with a sony pcm-d50.
Small wind-up toy being wound up and allowed to walk by the mic. The wind-up key is then abused a bit, making a sound not entirely unlike a scratching record (but not much like one, either).