The data contained in this file should represent a half-period sine wave. But because of the bug(s) in the header of wave file, it gets distorted (i. E. If you found the bug and fixed it in binary, you'd get perfect half-sine wave).
A binaural recording of a bees and other insects in one of our garden trees, using nt-sf1 and a zoomf8 in a-format. Transcoded using zoom player. 96khz/24bit.
A loud, mesmerizing chorus of summer insects. Recorded in the shawnee forest in july of 2017. Towards the end of this recording you hear the lazy drone of a plane. Marantz pmd-661 and audio-technica bp-4025 microphone.
A wonderful typical mid-summer soundscape of cicadas, and some katydids recorded on the edge of a small town in illinois. Towards the end of the recording you will hear a very cool doppler-effect as the truck passes from right to left. Recorded about 8:00 at night with my zoom h4-n recorder using it's internal microphones. I had the volume level set fairly high -- 80 -- so you will probably also hear the constant hum of the various central air conditioning units. .
Perhaps one of the most peaceful sound----a lone cricket singing his pure, melancholy chirp. Enjoy!. I recorded this with my marantz pmd661 -- performance enhanced by oade brothers of georgia --- and my rode ntg2 shotgun microphone.
This was recorded on the douglas spring trial near tucson, arizona. It was in the fall toward late afternoon. This was recorded on an iphone and then cleaned up in adobe audition to isolate the crickets.
Pine forest in nord odal small place north of oslo, norway. The spot has a view over the valley, distant traffic can be heard in the background. Recorded with two akg 480 omni with a jecklin disk.
Crickets recorded on an august night in mount sinai, n. Y. Closer to dense wooded area, dog barking in the distance. Recorded on a zoom h4n, 48khz 24 bit, noise reduction and high pass filter.
Wearing a protection-suite, i try to be as close as possible to the entrance of a beehive. Recorded in the garden of my friends. Binaural recording with soundman okm`s and a h4n. If you want to support my work, please visit:jardinsonore(. )bandcamp(. )comthere you find a lot more.
I made this wonderful recording in july 2011 at about 9:00 at night on a hot, muggy july evening. This is the time of year when the insect chorus can get very, very loud. Pretty amazing volume for such small insects. The really loud ones seem to reside in the trees and not on the ground. Recorder used: zoom h4n recorder using its built-in stereo microphones.