This is a short recording of a busy signal i made after attempting to call someone. Naturally, there was someone already on the line. Recorded with blue yeti microphone and audacity.
Picking up and hanging up a lightweight modern home or office telephone. First take is picking up, second take is hanging up. Recorded in studio. Unprocessed. The wav file is a dual mono file. Left channel is close perspective, recorded with an akg c2000b. Right channel is a bit more distant perspective, recorded, not sure, with a rode ntg1. Both on fostex fr2-le.
Picking up and hanging up a lightweight modern home or office telephone. First take is picking up, next take is hanging up, and so on. Recorded in studio. Unprocessed. The wav file is a dual mono file. Left channel is close perspective, recorded with an akg c2000b. Right channel is a bit more distant perspective, recorded, not sure, with a rode ntg1. Both on fostex fr2-le.
Picking up and hanging up a lightweight modern home or office telephone. First take is picking up, next take is hanging up, and so on. Recorded in studio. Unprocessed. The wav file is a dual mono file. Left channel is close perspective, recorded with an akg c2000b. Right channel is a bit more distant perspective, recorded, not sure, with a rode ntg1. Both on fostex fr2-le.
These sounds are produced by the instrument called rainstick. It has little pebbles inside that produce some interesting slide noises when held upside down or inclined. I hope they can help you in one of your projects.
At a tv game show was a question about numbers station. Because i've never heard of that i did some research. After i was kind of fascinated. So i decided trying to make my own sequence of a fake station. I used audacity, musescore2 and some public domain sounds.
Tono de sms para uso en telefonos móviles. Grabado golpeando una mesa de madera. Text message tone for smartphone use. Recorded hitting a wooden table.
I created a dtmf tone with an amplitude of 0. 8 and a tone/silence ratio of 550 and during 7s. Then i amplified 1. 3 db sound. And finally i multiplied the speed of 0,960.
Phone interference i'm happy for a donation, so i can continue to record, edit and upload more sounds!https://www. Paypal. Com/donate?hosted_button_id=85zydhde84nnc.
Some birds singing before night. Record is interrupted by a message received on the phone which vibrate :/. An eventful record which also shows human technology impact on nature. Location: nono, cordoba, argentina.
This sound of alarm clock was entirely made with audacity. First, i generated a sinusoïdal key at 575 hz with an amplitude of 0. 11 during 3 seconds. Then i deselect my track and i generated an other sinusoïdal key at 1500 hz with an amplitude of 0. 33 during 3 seconds too. I deselected the track and i generated a final sinusoïdal key at 2800 hz with an amplitude of 0. 56 during 3 seconds. Next i selected my 3 tracks and i clicked on track - mix and render to a new track. I added a tremolo effect with a reverse serrated and a degree of 0, a level of 100 and a frequence at 25,0 hz. The wave must looks like stuck triangles.
Iphone 6 taking pictures - recorded as a wav file on a blue snow ice condenser mic - used audacity to compress and remove any background noises. 4-5 pic taking sounds, with silence between them.
My phone ringing, me pressing the talk button, me yelling, me hanging up, and then me yelling again. This was made a long time ago. I think i had just put together some sounds i recorded for no reason in order to get this. Sorry about the poor quality. At the time i didn't have a good microphone.
Physical sound of clicking cellphone keys. Physical popping sound, finally one electronic beep. A little hissing. Siemens m55 mobile phone recorded with a røde videomic from close range. Processed slightly for lower noise.
Two slowed down samples of a cell phone on vibrate (taken from previously uploaded sound "phone vibrate". Now sounds more like an engine starting up and subsiding. . . Or a really lame lawnmower.
I made this using two oscillators in native instrument's fm8 synth. There is nothing too fancy, just two sine waves played out the same output, but one has an offset of 440hz, and the second oscillator has an offset of 330hz. I then just played two notes that didn't sound too dissonant, and then ran it through some low-fi processing.