An unsilent patch to celebrate that my spring reverb now is silent - when i want it to be silent. Spring reverbs can be sensitive to electricity. No my spring tank is hidden away!.
Field-recording for kadenze course introduction to sound and acoustic sketching. Recorded using zoom h4n, 16 bit, 44. 1 khz. Trimmed, normalized and faded in and out. Also slightly low-shelf filtered to remove excessive wind noise. Recording made in city park in ottawa, feb. 17, 2017. Sounds include bird calls and snow-removal equipment.
There is some cultural noise in the background, but the bird song is clear enough. This little fellow is a singing bird on a wire, looking for a mate on the morning of march 3, 2020 in dartmouth, nova scotia.
Like a stroll in winter, i wanted to transcribe a festive reality with the resumption of a christmas song with the tones and the imitation of fireworks.
For those who like a vintage sound, this impulse response tries to be the most faithful in the type of spring reverb used in the 60s, on vocals, on guitars, and mainly as a mixing reverb as an alternative to plate reverb if do you want the sound of a garage rock or dub. Depending on the context, you can leave the reverb in mono which reinforces the vintage character.
This is a sum of two units, a digital reverb ams rmx16 and spring reverb fisher k10 with gate, this was an experiment i wanted to do and by the way, it worked well.
A evil sort of claustrophobic hollow winterstormy wind heard from inside some sort of. . . Building or shed. . Pitch up and down for variations , you get different moods. It says its 64kbps 44100khz. . . Its actually a vbr using all the kbps necessary for it to have a non mp3 garbly sound.
One of my zapper lightguns, an accessory of the nintendo entertainment system. I tried to give a variety of trigger pulls. Recorded with a cad gxl2200 microphone.
Sound of a whitethroat singing in spring. This recording was then played back to the bird seconds later, and this secretive warbler flew out of cover towards me, and began to sing right next to me.
Cicadas of south city at summer night recorded from a window. Hi-pass filtered of various car sounds, and so timbre is not so natural — but maybe it’s what you are looking for?. Recorded by nokia 700, processed in audition.
Crickets recorded on august night in mount sinai, n. Y. In an open expanse between two large oak trees. Recorded on a zoom h4n, 48khz 24 bit, high pass filter and noise reduction.
A wonderful spring day in the midwest woods resulted in this recording of a beautiful small creek, deep in the woods. . . Enjoy. . . You will also hear various birds from time to time. I used my h4n and its internal microphones. .
A very typical recording of late summer as the insects wake up. This recording was done in the backyard in a small town around 5:00 in the morning. Just a wonderful example of the very rhythmic, ebb and flow that these choruses of summer make. I used my zoom h4n recorder with its internal built-in microphones with the volume set on 78. .
Cicadas, sea and highway in the distance, rilke trail near trieste (sentiero rilke, duino, trieste, italy), summer 2013, recorded with zoom h4n, sennheiser shotgun mic and rode blimp.
Flicking a pop filter attached to a blue yeti pro in a way that then causes it to collide and vibrate. Recorded with adobe audition and a blue yeti pro usb microphone.
Cricket ambience, recorded on a humid evening in the summer of 2011. Some gentle wind noise through the trees is also audible, as are some distant motorcycles and an airplane flying overhead. (the wind noise on the mic briefly becomes loud a few times, but the recording is mostly clean. ).
Cricket ambience, recorded on a humid evening in the summer of 2011. Some gentle wind noise through the trees is also audible, as are some distant motorcycles and an airplane flying overhead.