A 16 minute long recording of the ticks made by a 19th century longcase/grandfather clock. Recorded by an edirol r-09hr field-recorder inside the clock hood. Free of other ambient sounds.
Sound of a calculator when turned on, very similar to casio wrist-watches' sound. Recorded and noise-filtered with my laptop's microphone and adobe audition cs6. Sonido de una calculadora al encenderse, muy similar al que hace un reloj de pulsera casio. Grabado y limpiado con el micrófono de mi portátil y adobe audition cs6.
A reverse 20" mapex ride cymbal. Captured with a sure sm57. Noticeable lack of high end, however, it can still be used for song intros etc. (no reverb or any other effects were added to this sound).
An upright piano chord sequence repeated three times, and a clock ticks!. This recording is not a perfect loop but able to be made such. Tempo is synced to clock ticks and so is almost accurately 120 bpm. Recorded by sony xperia c5305.
This series is done through layering and processing many samples of drum sounds i synthesised using various plugins namely xoxo's vst's and zynaddsubfx mixed with some old hardware samples i made a long time ago. There are 4 packs of the same series : perc snare kick and hats all using the same process.
No thrills here. This is a 1940's german mantel-clock ticking. Recorded on a mac using a samson co3u microphone (usb connected). Straight recording, just noise removal and fade out at the end.
This is the complete sound of a stripping plier(for electric wire) you hear the squize and release. Recorded with my phone. Tang1 is squize only. Tang2 is release only.
Me tapping a series of objects on a block of heavy, toothy paper. A pencil eraser, metal nail file, empty straw wrapper, a metal hole-punch, and a crinkled wadded up paper.
The sound of me attaching and deattaching two of my lenses to my pentax k-x which are the 18-55mm kit lens first and then my 80-200mm sears lens next. It was i believe five times for each lens. Recorded with the audio technica atr 6550.
She's not very big but she could really put her weight behind it. And she did. Some days you eat the bear, some days the bear eats you. Can't help but wish it was me.
I'm a student studying sound and i and recording sounds this is one of the recordings. This sound was recorded by having the microphone near a clock in a empty room.