It's the 80s and i'm about half-way through making a punk/new wave party mix tape when my turntable starts repeating itself. Unwilling to to back and re-record the mix, i batted the needle around on the record for half a second and stopped the tape. This is the part that isn't recognizable as "hey, st. Peter!".
An emulation of the classic "rewind and stop" sound performed by djs to add tension before the drop. Made after tens of trials using fl studio's fruity scratcher on a sample i don't remember. Le: i'm happy this sample from 10 years ago helped so many people, cheers to all!. If you liked this sound you might also like my oriental song, check it out!https://soundcloud. Com/miles-under/bazar.
From a sample set made in 2003 using vinyl records on a motor-less (i. E. Hand driven) turntable. All sounds in this set are less than 1 sec long, so can be good for percussion hits, sfx, etc.
A continuous blank record groove running almost 22 minutes in length. This is from the unused backside of a 1961 test pressing made for a commercial release on the mgm record label. Nothing is looped or enhanced in any way. The final 28 seconds of the file is the stylus riding in the lock groove near the label. For anyone curious about the vinyl source, a discogs page exists for it. Https://www. Discogs. Com/sam-the-man-taylor-sam-the-man-taylor-plays-hollywood/release/20174371.