Walking in crunchy, icy snow along the side of a tarmack road. Recorded in stereo 24 bit 96 khz with the internal mics on a sony m10 with windjammer. Please use this sound for whatever you want, completely free, no restrictions. Although i really appreciate a comment if you use my sound for something interesting. Always fun to hear where my recordings end up :).
Telephone 70s circle dial dialing recorded using a sennheiser wireless dynamic ew135g2 microphone through a yamaha dm1000 digital console with cubase software.
Damaged smartphone screen protector being broken and crushed in bare hands (should've used gloves. . . ). Recorded with behringer b-1 microphone into focusrite scarlett 2i2 3rd gen. Into audacity on arch linux at 192 khz/24 bit. The recording was not processed or edited in any way to retain maximum flexibility to sound artists who will use this as an element. This can be useful as a sound effect for freezing or burning or deep-frying or even rain (when slowed down). Thanks to extremely wide frequency range the recording can be cleanly slowed down up to 25% speed. There's clean frequency content up to 80 khz in the recording. In a few places the mic gain was too much and a pop is clipped, but could still be useful for sound of braking or snapping something (bone?). No denoising was applied - perform your own if needed, though the sounds are mostly free of background hum (a bit of pc noise can be heard in the first minute before i turned down the gain).
An ice storm moves in to the deep woods of north carolina on 01/30/2014. As the small particles of ice and sleet fall through the pine trees, they land on a bed of pine straw on the ground below. This is that sound. It's cold, solitary, and gives you a feeling of total isolation. Enjoy!. Christopher c. Courter.
Recording of a telephone left off the hook. The tone is used in the mountain time zone of the us. Recorded from a cordless at&t; phone set on 'speaker', using an akg-c1000s.
British telecom standard issue relate 18 land-line handset from around c1995. Ringer recorded through built in stereo microphones of a tascam dr-40 linear pcm recorder. 16 bit wav file in stereo.
Footsteps on an icy sidewalk recorded in january 2018. Nice crunching walking sound. There is a converted mp3 version available if you can't use m4a or just don't want to mess with the conversion.