3 019 royaltyfrie lydfiler for «Time»

00:00
00:50
In front of my desk in my room is a wood paneled wall with a cubbie. It's about a foot wide, 10 inches from top to bottom and maybe 7 inches deep. I'm just guessing. Around this cubbie is a border of wood. In the bottom right corner under the border i have jammed one end of an elastic string that used to have glitter on it. It's from a christmas box of chocolates my uncle sent me last year. I stand in front of this cubbie whose bottom is at chin height, (i'm only 5ft1in) so my arms are above my head as i pull this string across the cubbie up and to the left to the border on the top which acts as my only fret. The string is a few inches longer than the cubbie is wide, but when i pull it it gets longer so my hand is 3/4 along it's length as i pull back and forth across the border to tighten and loosen the string. No matter how hard i pull it never pops loose from it's mooring. This time the mic is sitting in the cubby so i get a much clearer and louder sound. When i stretch the string across the top it has a fairly long sustain, so i can play 4 notes on a single pluck.
Forfatter: Kbclx
00:00
00:02
So these are all real reactions to certain things i do, i. E, video games, narrations, etc. Funny story. . . The reason this one is from far away is because while recording a narration, a lovely spider decided to descend from the ceiling, and i flipped out, having decently bad arachnophobia. It also got near my hamster's cage, so naturally i bellowed "die!" when killing it. I'm uh. . . Very passionate about certain things. I myself need genuinely real vocal reactions. I often look for voice clips here on freesound, and there's just some stuff that isn't here. I know i'm not the only one, either, so i post mine as well so others may use them. Interestingly, i've gotten one person who took the time to uh. . . Tell me how they. . . Disapproved of my voice clips, so i just wanted to say that if you wanna use them, do, if not, don't, that's why they are there. I enjoy animating, and others do too, wanting to use others' voice clips. I also had a couple people make techno remixes of a lot of my sounds (thank you by the way, they're awesome). It's not that i care about the. . . Interesting way the one person expressed their opinion, it's just to let some similar acting people know that i post these for a reason. *shrug* but whatever floats your zeppelin, i honestly don't care. Anyway, for those who do use them, thank you. :p.
Forfatter: Reitanna
00:00
02:44
I recorded the last part of my travel to work, the first day after my vacation. Inside the train my recording equipment (soundman digital recorder dr2) generates a lot of digital noise – more than usual. Interesting. Therefore i upload from when the commuter train stops at gothenburg central station and the doors open and i walk away from the station. The digital noise is there all the time but just less audible. In the beginning of the sound file you hear the noise clearly. Don’t buy this little recorder… (it has a sigmatel recording chip. ). In the frequency analysis, and spectral view, i notice peaks at about 800 - 950hz, 7850 - 8350hz and 16100-16450hz. I guess this is part of the digital noise. Tried to eq this away with spectral edit. This did not improve the sound. The noise has a wider spectrum. Tried to download the “latest” firmware at www. Soundman. De. Had to open command prompt and use unzip to extract the files. What?! but the firmware downloader does not detect the “device”. I doubt there is a new firmware anyway. The year for this recording, according to the recorder, is 2002…. The recording starts about 07:50 monday, august 07, 2017. I took 2 seconds from the beginning of this file and used paulstretch. Resulting in a 20second digital noise drone, “dr2 digital noise”,https://freesound. Org/people/gis_sweden/sounds/399075/had a thought that i could use a file like this to cancel out these frequencies from the other file with an inverted digital noise file… but i cant invert frequencies – off course :-d.
Forfatter: Gis Sweden
00:00
05:02
This is one of a set of voices created to be mixed together to form background ambiance for parties and other events. The walla project is the creation of jule hoverson of 19 nocturne boulevard and public domain for all to use without attribution. Script. Party crowd:well, look who's here!i thought you weren't coming?oh, i see. Well, put your coat over there and grab a drink. So, where were we?oh yeah, so my boss says to me i need to work late, and i tell him that if he wants me to work late he's going to have to pay me to work overtime. You think he likes that?what he do?he told me that he can get a college grad to do my job for half the price. Well, i told him- try it!hey, are those snacks fresh?let me have one!mmmm. . . . Tasty!ow!what is this? a snail?i think i chipped a tooth!excuse me. I better go call a dentist!oh no! look who just walked in!can you believe her? wearing a dress like that?that's not his wife. Mmm-hmm. I'm so excited, this is my first time at a soiree {swa-ray} like this!isn't that too too adorable?who's got the glasses?isn’t there anything to drink?i hope you don't mind, but we're going to have to leave early. I'm here! the party can start!i definitely need another one. That was the babysitter. We need to go. [plus - feel free to ad lib anything else you want. ].
Forfatter: Ultrarob
00:00
00:37
A few cycles of my dad's home oxygen machine with a ticking battery operated clock in the background recorded in the early morning in the living room with lifecam hd3000 webcam at the end of about 16 feet of usb cable dragged out of my bedroom. He's about 6 feet away, i was with my back to the room with my camera pointed at my chest so he wouldn't think i was filming. It would seem this is the first and only oxygen machine on freesound. A full cycle seems to last from between 7 to 10 seconds. From wikipediaoxygen concentrators typically use pressure swing adsorption technology and are used very widely for oxygen provision in healthcare applications, especially where liquid or pressurised oxygen is too dangerous or inconvenient, such as in homes or in portable clinics. Oxygen concentrators are also used to provide an economical source of oxygen in industrial processes, where they are also known as oxygen gas generators or oxygen generation plants. Oxygen concentrators utilize a molecular sieve to adsorb gasses and operate on the principle of rapid pressure swing adsorption of atmospheric nitrogen onto zeolite minerals and then venting the nitrogen. This type of adsorption system is therefore functionally a nitrogen scrubber leaving the other atmospheric gasses to pass through. This leaves oxygen as the primary gas remaining. Psa technology is a reliable and economical technique for small to mid-scale oxygen generation, with cryogenic separation more suitable at higher volumes and external delivery generally more suitable for small volumes. [1]at high pressure, the porous zeolite adsorbs large quantities of nitrogen, due to its large surface area and chemical character. After the oxygen and other free components are collected the pressure drops which allows nitrogen to desorb. An oxygen concentrator has an air compressor, two cylinders filled with zeolite pellets, a pressure equalizing reservoir, and some valves and tubes. In the first half-cycle the first cylinder receives air from the compressor, which lasts about 3 seconds. During that time the pressure in the first cylinder rises from atmospheric to about 1. 5 times normal atmospheric pressure (typically 20 psi/138 kpa gauge, or 1. 36 atmospheres absolute) and the zeolite becomes saturated with nitrogen. As the first cylinder reaches near pure oxygen (there are small amounts of argon, co2, water vapour, radon and other minor atmospheric components) in the first half-cycle, a valve opens and the oxygen enriched gas flows to the pressure equalizing reservoir, which connects to the patient's oxygen hose. At the end of the first half of the cycle, there is another valve position change so that the air from the compressor is directed to the 2nd cylinder. Pressure in the first cylinder drops as the enriched oxygen moves into the reservoir, allowing the nitrogen to be desorbed back into gas. Part way through the second half of the cycle there is another valve position change to vent the gas in the first cylinder back into the ambient atmosphere, keeping the concentration of oxygen in the pressure equalizing reservoir from falling below about 90%. The pressure in the hose delivering oxygen from the equalizing reservoir is kept steady by a pressure reducing valve. Older units cycled with a period of about 20 seconds, and supplied up to 5 litres per minute of 90+% oxygen. Since about 1999, units capable of supplying up to 10 lpm have been available.
Forfatter: Kbclx
00:00
02:45
This is a sci-fi ambient drone sound i made. It's creative commons cc0, so please treat it as public domain. You can use it in any commercial or non-commercial media for free, no restrictions. For those curious how i made this, i took a quick 8-second drum loop from my pocket operator po-33 (ko) and ran it through a free time-stretching/pitch-shifting program called akaizer. The program's based on old samplers like the akai s1000 that had extremely artifact-heavy time-stretching and pitch-shifting features. If you slow a sound down enough, the final product tends to sound harsh and electric. Akaizer turned my 8-second drum loop into 2 minutes and 38 seconds of harsh, bassy noise, pretty damn close to the final. Then i imported the file (we'll call it file a) into reaper, my daw. Track 1 has reaeq with a high-shelf acting like a low-pass. Its curve is set at 1386. 2 hz, gain at -inf, and bandwidth at 2. In retrospect, i have no idea why i didn't use a low-pass. Track 1 has a send to a blank track 2, which has a fab-filter pro-q 3 high-pass filter with a 12db slope. It's at 320. 57hz, q is 1. 096. After the eq, track 2 has valhalla shimmer set to the black hole preset with no changes. Track 3 is the default file a with valhalla shimmer on the black hole setting, but with two tweaks. Low-cut is at 30hz, high-cut is at 6630hz. Everything else is the same. That's followed by fab-filter pro-q 3 with these eq settings:-0. 72db at 69. 463hz, q at 1. 007. -1. 11db at 536. 64hz, q at 1. 013, dynamic eq (click "make dynamic" and leave everything as-is). The point of this dynamic eq is to give a slight drop in gain in the 500hz region, which tends to get muddy in larger mixes. I wasn't sure if i'd use this for a larger project, and i didn't want build-up in that region from the already large-sounding track 1 and 2. The ocassional eq drops here also adds a warble to the final mix that helps sell an analog, electrical sound. +0. 85db at 3697. 3hz, q at 1. 009. This is to add subtle airiness to the drone. It seems weird to have "airiness" in the 3-4k region, but it's the sort of rumbliness of the sound traveling away and dissipating in the atmosphere after the lowest drone sounds. My volume fader settings for all 3 tracks:. Track 1: -8. 59 dbtrack 2: -6. 46 dbtrack 3: -6. 43 db. On my master bus, i have izotope imager 9 with these settings:. Band 1: width at -100 (mono) for 59hz and below. Band 2: nothing at 60hz to 525hz (width at 0). Band 3: width at 48. 1 for 526 to 1. 4khz. Band 4: width at 49. 4 at 1. 4khz and above. Stereoize is set to 6. 4ms on mode i. And that's it! no compressors or limiters anywhere, since i liked how dynamic the actual tracks were and i figure you can always add your own compressor or limiter to the final if you want. I've also added the original po-33 drum loop on my page, as well as the loop after it was run through akaizer but before it hit reaper in case you want to do your own processing. Enjoy :).
Forfatter: Niedec
00:00
02:40
Created by divkid for use in the make noise soundhack morphagene. There are dry-only, fx-only, and mix versions of this reel in the pack. See it in action at https://youtu. Be/rk4ufmfcouc. Patch walkthrough. The patch starts with the qu-bit chance providing discrete random values (sample and hold) going into an instruo harmonaig. This takes the stepped random voltages and quantizing them to a given scale. I put in the notes c d eb f g ab bb which is a c natural minor scale, the relative minor of eb major (for anyone that's curious). However like most of my modular work i didn't actually tune the oscillators to anything specific. So treat the scale as a pattern of intervals not a set of specific notes. The quantized notes then form 4 voice chords giving us a root, third, fifth and seventh cv output that will be diatonic following the scale pattern, meaning the third will be major or minor, the seventh major, minor or dominant and the fifth natural or diminshed to suit the scale. With the 4 quantized outputs on the harmonaig these all go into the four oscillators on the synthesis technology e370 quad morphing vco. Each of the e370 oscillators are in the basic morph xy mode using the built in rom b set of wavetables. Wavetables are modulating by various mixes of the befaco rampage, mutable instruments tides, wmd multimode envelopes and music thing modular turing machine. The modulation sources are mixed and split with multiples and mixers. These modulating wavetables then go into a bubblesound vca4p where i'm using 4 mk1 intellijel dixie oscillators all un-synced and free running with sine wave lfos. Each lfo freely fades the voice in and out of the vca4p. As this is unsynced there's no regard to pitch changes linked to changes in amplitude and the swells. I find splitting the gate/rhythm from pitch regarding sequencing to be a freeing and interesting way to work that's not available on traditional instruments. This is just a simple application of that idea with the lfos fading freely unrelated to the other modulation or sequencing of pitch. The sound then goes from the vca4p mix out into a befaco mixer and praxis snake charmer which the output section of the larger case and i'm sending a 'pre' auxiliary out into my fx case. The dry sound first goes into the erica synths fusion delay / flanger vintage ensemble which is giving me short modulated delays giving vibrato like sounds and pushing the input level and overdrive gives us some warmth and grit that thickens up the sound and also fills in the gaps left by the free running lfos pulling quieter sounds and compressing in the on board tube. This then outputs to the feedback 1 bit multitap delay module which has it's delay chip pushed to longer times for some added crackle and noise. I'm using the two delay taps for a shorter and longer delay with little feedback to mix the dry sound for a generally noisier and smeared version of the input. This then goes into the xaoc devices kamieniec with it's on board lfo as slow as possibly for a mildly resonant phase shifting. This goes into mutable instruments clouds set to sew random grains slowly and randomly which are pitch shifted up 2 octaves to fill out some high end flourishes against the closed chord voicings at the core of the patch. Finally this goes into a long lush reverb from the halls of valhalla card in the tiptop audio z-dsp. The stereo fx chain and the mono dry signal are mixed in the befaco hexmix and recorded as a mixed stereo file. I'd consider this to be the main 'reel'. However i split the dry signal and the fx only wet stereo signal and recorded those at the same time so you can choose which reel to use and experiment with dry/wet or blended sounds from this patch.
Forfatter: Makenoisemusic
00:00
02:15
This is a reading from the second chapter of "nathaniel's nutmeg: or, the true and incredible adventures of the spice trader who changed the course of history", by giles milton. It is also intended for the freesound sound museum to represent books as what is fading rapidly into obsolescence. By the time you read this, you may not even know what a books is. Books are when the written word is compiled onto sheets of paper in a long-form volume. You may not know what paper is. Paper is commonly used to write on or make oregano cranes with, being flat and thin rectangles made from trees. You probably won't remember what a tree was. That is a very sad thing. They are all gone now, destroyed in feckless deference to paper. When the paper runs out, there will be nothing left to write our collective histories on, what we desperately need. When this occurs, it will stand as the moment our past was truly lost, leaving us lost the same, drifting in circles. Until another man or woman rises up to invent trees again, thus beginning the cycle anew. It's a beautiful idea. We should always be moving towards the future, not lost in syrupy memories of old forests not seen for what they really are: petrified wood and amber. Leave that with the other fossils and relics. Let it be the final page written on the last book until it crumbles to dust. Let it go. The file was recorded using a mid/side stereo technique at 24bits, downsampled to 16bits under the loving care of gaussian dither. The room was treated as best i could to be acoustically pleasing and quiet. I think you will find the noise floor to be particularly well balanced and textured, suitable for post-production tasks, or just for relaxing with at home. .
Forfatter: Stomachache
00:00
01:28
Forward with NOAA the NOAA Corps Song The "NOAA Corps Song" is actually entitled "Forward with NOAA." In 1987-88 the National Association of Commissioned Officers (ACO) was interested in commissioning a NOAA Song. Captain (then Commander) Steve Manzo was a member of the ACO Executive Board and volunteered to assist. Manzo contacted a long-time friend, Bob Arberg. Bob's father, Bud Arberg, had actually written the music and words to the "Army Song" -- while assigned to the Adjutant General's Staff during World War II. Dr. Arberg (former Princeton graduate in music) was retired and he readily volunteered to write a song. Dr. Arberg was provided reference materials on the NOAA Corps. He recognized at the outset that this was an attempt to build NOAA Corps morale and he cautioned that buy-in/acceptance within the Corps would not be easy. The song was first presented at a National ACO Dining-In in either 1988 or 89. Secretary of Commerce William Verity was present, as were both Bud and Bob Arberg. Bud Arberg played the piano and performed the "NOAA Song" to the assembled group of 150 officers and guests. Upon completing the NOAA Song, Secretary Verity graciously presented Dr. Arberg with a small gift of thanks on behalf of DOC/NOAA/NOAA Corps. The music was arranged by the USAF Band. The words are as follows: Forward with NOAA With the Corps that's got it all Science and Service We are always there to meet the call We survey the oceans And we track storms in the air Forward with NOAA We're the NOAA Corps, we're always there -- Musical Interlude then Repeat -- Forward with NOAA With the Corps that's got it all Science and Service We are always there to meet the call We survey the oceans And we track storms in the air Forward with NOAA We're the NOAA Corps, we're always there
Forfatter: Untitled
00:00
08:36
December Makes Me Feel This Way ("Joy to the World") performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 6 from Christmas Time is Here (1998). Recorded at the Center For The Arts, George Mason University, January 24-27, 1998. Credits: Alto Saxophone – Technical Sergeant Andy Axelrad* Alto Saxophone [Lead] – Senior Master Sergeant Joe Eckert* Baritone Saxophone – Master Sergeant Don New* Bass – Master Sergeant Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – Master Sergeant Dudley Hinote* Directed By – Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Drums – Senior Master Sergeant C. E. Askew* Engineer [Assistant] – Master Sergeant Kendall Thomsen* Engineer, Edited By – Bruce Leek Guitar – Technical Sergeant Shawn Purcell* Layout [Graphic] – Master Sergeant Dudley J. Hinote*, Master Sergeant Judith J. Thompson*, Technical Sergeant Robert K. McConnell* Liner Notes – Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Mixed By – Senior Master Sergeant Mike Crotty*, Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Percussion – Master Sergeant Pat Shrieves* (tracks: 2, 4 to 11) Piano – Master Sergeant Wade Beach Jr.* Producer – Senior Master Sergeant Mike Crotty*, Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Tenor Saxophone – Senior Master Sergeant Saul Miller Jr.* Tenor Saxophone [Lead] – Chief Master Sergeant Pete BarenBregge* Trombone – Technical Sergeant Jeff Martin* Trombone [Assistant Lead] – Technical Sergeant Ben Patterson* Trombone [Lead] – Master Sergeant Joe Jackson* Trumpet – Master Sergeant Rich Sigler*, Technical Sergeant Tim Leahey* Trumpet [Assistant Lead] – Master Sergeant Dave Detwiler* Trumpet [Lead] – Master Sergeant Bruce Gates* Vocals – Master Sergeant Tracey Wright*
Forfatter: Composition: George Frederick Handel; Arrangement: TSgt Alan Baylock; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
00:00
01:39
We are writing the end of the 20th century _ _ _ cheer up !. After a nice concerto @ the charlatans, ghentduring the infamous ghentse fiestas ! ! ! ! !one of the guitarists of the band torturadodrives back home,. . . 72h after the concertthat is. . . He don't remember having slept. . . Ghentse fiestas are hardcore, he does rememberthe hamburger @ the vlasmarkt though. . . &he thought he heared 'vree wijs' like a thousand timesbut back then he couldn't decifre the real meaning of thosemumblings. . . So he always answered back to the girls, with 'i'm latino !' ( the usual reply). Hm,. . . Suddenly on the radio he hears musicwhich strangely seems familiar to himwhen the radio host describes the artisthe seems to be talking about the torturado boi ??!!!!##is he ??!!!!!#é"'((('à)§!(çà. Is this some kind of message from the future ???. The reference of glenn branca is there, but 2015 ??? never happened yet. . . Wooooooojoo !!!!. There is also this clear 'why nut' 2020 duyvisch nuts publicity reference !!!that he obviously doesn"t get yet, but an invisible force, makes him grab some nuts (not what you think), he bought just before entering the car ??!!! (you see!). Is this some kind of message from the future ???. No ! as the host continues the little descriptionhe makes a t e r r i b l e trabalengua or you knowknot explosion with the tongue & has to repeatthree times the sequence of the stroboscope. Wtf is going on here. . . The future seems to besending a very unflattering non elegant message to him _ _ _. It just seems to be just a rehearsal for a descriptionof the solo artist he is going to be. . . What the fuuuuuuuuukkkkk ?!!!èy"é'!'"''çé'ç"'à"'"é'é")*¨%££££££=:;ù%%%%. -----------------------------------------------------------------------. Recorded with my new dpa 4060very happy with iti can write a whole essayabout how i found it & stuffbut i think it's better totell you live in a barwith a beer or 5 ! ! ! ! ! !. 11112020josé !. P. S. All references to real persons/situations/musicians/latino's/birthdates, es-pe-cially for tindr dates / ! \ are very fictive, jaja !.
Forfatter: Antwerpsounddesign
00:00
04:06
Good King Wenceslas and His Merry Band performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 1 from Christmas Time is Here (1998). Recorded at the Center For The Arts, George Mason University, January 24-27, 1998. Credits: Alto Saxophone – Technical Sergeant Andy Axelrad* Alto Saxophone [Lead] – Senior Master Sergeant Joe Eckert* Baritone Saxophone – Master Sergeant Don New* Bass – Master Sergeant Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – Master Sergeant Dudley Hinote* Directed By – Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Drums – Senior Master Sergeant C. E. Askew* Engineer [Assistant] – Master Sergeant Kendall Thomsen* Engineer, Edited By – Bruce Leek Guitar – Technical Sergeant Shawn Purcell* Layout [Graphic] – Master Sergeant Dudley J. Hinote*, Master Sergeant Judith J. Thompson*, Technical Sergeant Robert K. McConnell* Liner Notes – Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Mixed By – Senior Master Sergeant Mike Crotty*, Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Percussion – Master Sergeant Pat Shrieves* (tracks: 2, 4 to 11) Piano – Master Sergeant Wade Beach Jr.* Producer – Senior Master Sergeant Mike Crotty*, Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Tenor Saxophone – Senior Master Sergeant Saul Miller Jr.* Tenor Saxophone [Lead] – Chief Master Sergeant Pete BarenBregge* Trombone – Technical Sergeant Jeff Martin* Trombone [Assistant Lead] – Technical Sergeant Ben Patterson* Trombone [Lead] – Master Sergeant Joe Jackson* Trumpet – Master Sergeant Rich Sigler*, Technical Sergeant Tim Leahey* Trumpet [Assistant Lead] – Master Sergeant Dave Detwiler* Trumpet [Lead] – Master Sergeant Bruce Gates* Vocals – Master Sergeant Tracey Wright*
Forfatter: Composition: traditional; Arrangement: SMSgt Mike Crotty; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
00:00
01:08
This is the audible annunciation found at all intersections with traffic lights in paris, france. It announces the condition of the traffic lights for pedestrians who are blind or with impaired vision. The annunciation is turned on by pressing a button on the traffic light pole. When the crosswalk sign is red (do not cross), the recorded annunciation is always "rouge piéton" ("red light, pedestrian"), followed by the name of the street that the crosswalk crosses (in this case "rue d'antin," the quiet side street where i recorded this). This repeats over and over until the crosswalk changes to green, at which point there is a two-second trill tone followed by a repeating bell tone. The bell tone is one bell, followed by two bells, repeated four times, followed by a very brief pause, and then the sequence is repeated again. This continues until the crosswalk changes back to red, at which point the "rouge piéton" message resumes. The annunciation continues for at least one cycle of the traffic lights and then stops, unless the button is pressed again. The audio quality of the annunciation is very poor even in real life (it sounds like a wax cylinder recording or something), and can be difficult to understand. This recording accurately captures the poor quality of the annunciation. The volume of the annunciation is also adjusted dynamically based on ambient noise, so there is a slight change in volume on this recording as the system apparently reacts to noise from traffic or something. There is a weak background noise that sounds like some sort of machine, but it wasn't coming from the traffic light and i don't know the source. The recording starts with the crosswalk red, then at about 18. 3 seconds it changes to green, then it changes back to red at about 53 seconds. A car passes at around 48 seconds. Recorded with a zoom h4n, stereo 96 khz / 24 bits, built-in mics, from about ten inches below the tiny speaker in the crosswalk sign housing.
Forfatter: Mxsmanic
00:00
05:41
Away in a Manger (jazz rendition) performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 10 from Christmas Time is Here (1998). Recorded at the Center For The Arts, George Mason University, January 24-27, 1998. Credits: Alto Saxophone – Technical Sergeant Andy Axelrad* Alto Saxophone [Lead] – Senior Master Sergeant Joe Eckert* Baritone Saxophone – Master Sergeant Don New* Bass – Master Sergeant Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – Master Sergeant Dudley Hinote* Directed By – Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Drums – Senior Master Sergeant C. E. Askew* Engineer [Assistant] – Master Sergeant Kendall Thomsen* Engineer, Edited By – Bruce Leek Guitar – Technical Sergeant Shawn Purcell* Layout [Graphic] – Master Sergeant Dudley J. Hinote*, Master Sergeant Judith J. Thompson*, Technical Sergeant Robert K. McConnell* Liner Notes – Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Mixed By – Senior Master Sergeant Mike Crotty*, Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Percussion – Master Sergeant Pat Shrieves* (tracks: 2, 4 to 11) Piano – Master Sergeant Wade Beach Jr.* Producer – Senior Master Sergeant Mike Crotty*, Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Tenor Saxophone – Senior Master Sergeant Saul Miller Jr.* Tenor Saxophone [Lead] – Chief Master Sergeant Pete BarenBregge* Trombone – Technical Sergeant Jeff Martin* Trombone [Assistant Lead] – Technical Sergeant Ben Patterson* Trombone [Lead] – Master Sergeant Joe Jackson* Trumpet – Master Sergeant Rich Sigler*, Technical Sergeant Tim Leahey* Trumpet [Assistant Lead] – Master Sergeant Dave Detwiler* Trumpet [Lead] – Master Sergeant Bruce Gates* Vocals – Master Sergeant Tracey Wright*
Forfatter: Composition: James Murray; Arrangement: TSgt Alan Baylock; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
00:00
01:58
Yep this is a crazy sound. What have i done. . . I have build a nonlinearcircuits sloth lfo. Https://www. Modulargrid. Net/e/nonlinearcircuits-sloth-4hpedited info:i have built the regular version. The sloth has two outputs x and y. I connected x to control frequency on one oscillator and y to control amplitude on another oscillator. Frequency experiment on left channel. Amplitude experiment on the right. The file starts as the amplitude is 0. Next time the amplitude is 0 (almost) is at about 48 sec. Then 48 sec later, at 1:37 the amplitude is 0 again. The two cycles are not identical. The tones are harder to analyze. . . X and y outputs. I guess those corresponds to x and y in a coordinate system. You can find video clips watching the sloth “drawing” butterfly wings. For example:https://www. Youtube. Com/watch?v=0ku6npz1s4gand maybe check this:https://www. Youtube. Com/watch?v=occhcm5oxp8http://nonlinearcircuits. Blogspot. Se/2014/09/sloth-chaos. Htmlthis later link is the developers page. The constructor (andrew) of this module says that my version completes “1 cycle every 15 seconds”. What does that mean? is one cycle one lap in the butterfly pattern? will the pattern repeat itself? yep, i’m going to ask him…. Edit:andrew answers my questions: “it is a very approximate description of the frequency, cycle is not the proper term to use. . . . Nor is frequency really, but they are descriptions that people can relate to easily. Depending upon the pot settings and whatever other initial conditions that happen to be in place, the signal may traverse the typical double strange attractor path. It may stay in one attractor for several loops before crossing over to the other one. The pattern will never repeats itself, it might come close but won't do it. ”my question: so, one “loop” is one cycle?andrew answers: typically it takes approx 15 seconds to make a rough figure 8, but depending upon the pot and other factors, it may take longer, much longer, sometimes it even pauses whilst deciding which way to go next.
Forfatter: Gis Sweden
00:00
22:46
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) Cantata BWV 125: Mit Fried und Freud ich fahr dahin (2 February 1725) 1. Mit Fried und Freud ich fahr dahin (Chorus) 2. Ich will auch mit gebrochnen Augen (Aria: A) 05:27 3. O Wunder, daß ein Herz (Recitative: B) 13:19 4. Ein unbegreiflich Licht erfüllt den ganzen Kreis der Erden (Duet: T, B) 15:36 5. O unerschöpfter Schatz der Güte (Recitative: A) 20:55 6. Er ist das Heil und selig Licht (Chorale) 21:37 Soloists: Alto: Ingeborg Danz Tenor: Mark Padmore Bass: Peter Kooy Performed by Collegium Vocale Gent under the direction of Philippe Herreweghe. Recorded by Harmonia Mundi France in 1998. "Bach composed the cantata 'Mit Fried und Freud' for the feast of the Purification on 2 February 1725. Here, the opening chorus is in 12/8 time, which is almost always associated with a peaceful, pastoral mood. Here it is the expressive key of E minor, which, raised to monumental heights, will re-appear in the opening chorus of the St. Matthew Passion. The chorale is sung in long note values by the soprano accompanied by the lower voices of the chorus in densely textured imitation, and which takes up the serenely elegiac movement of the instrumental ritornello theme. Only twice does Bach interrupt the pattern: at the words 'sanft und stille' all the voices drop into a sudden 'piano' and even the lively rhythm of the vocal part gives way to a more tranquil measure. The contrast of the 'forte' on the next words, 'wie Gott mir verheißen hat' is all the more convincing in relation to the preceding words. Once again Bach leads the vocal part into a quiet, even tenor for the final line of the chorale, 'der Tod ist mein Schlaf worden.' " - Thomas Seedorf Painting: Still Life with Three Medlars, Adriaen Coorte
Forfatter: scrymgeour34
00:00
00:29
upspeeded version of the previous theme 1. Wav*made with lmmsused sound: bit invader, arpeggio sus4 with some range. Time peaked at 75ms and vokalformant-filter at 50bpm 4/4. Feel free to use. Public domain https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ Electronic, Synth, Note, Oscillator, Csound https://freesound.org/people/cybilopsin/sounds/622830/ Quickly Synth Cybilopsin Freesound.org https://freesound.org/ freesound_org_c2f38a4f2a4f6a087d49c06ae51541bf40091919 ./freesound/622830__cybilopsin__quickly-synth.flac flac c2f38a4f2a4f6a087d49c06ae51541bf40091919 Electronic synthesis with csound. Public domain https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ Belt, Battery, Ford, Cold, Van, Vehicle, Motor, Vroom, Start, Screeching, Dead, Automobile, Diesel, Drive, Car, Rattle, Driving, Old, Engine https://freesound.org/people/Mullumbimby/sounds/622829/ Cold Start Of Old Diesel Car Mullumbimby Freesound.org https://freesound.org/ freesound_org_242221dd02ed50bfa79d5d4377299d58fbf01dd0 ./freesound/622829__mullumbimby__cold-start-of-old-diesel-car.flac flac 242221dd02ed50bfa79d5d4377299d58fbf01dd0 Cold startup of an old ford transit diesel van. The engine turns over very reluctantly and gives out it's telltale belt-screeching sound after startup before it drives off. Recorded in pcm stereo with a zoom h1n field recorder. Public domain https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ Scream, Pain, Yell, Shriek https://freesound.org/people/RJr2009/sounds/622833/ First Scream Rjr Freesound.org https://freesound.org/ freesound_org_210a1798560d372d4381c2ce1d0e8342163f1656 ./freesound/622833__rjr2009__scream1.flac flac 210a1798560d372d4381c2ce1d0e8342163f1656 Me screaming into the microphone, recorded on videopad. Public domain https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ Space, Electronic, Drone, Riser https://freesound.org/people/Da-JS/sounds/622840/ Riser Bars Bpm Da Js Freesound.org https://freesound.org/ freesound_org_f1dd3a64137ce6ab46251a9aa695fe8923833b21 ./freesound/622840__da-js__riser-4-bars-120-bpm.flac flac f1dd3a64137ce6ab46251a9aa695fe8923833b21 A riser created in ableton with hybrid reverb. Public domain https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ Chill, Soft, Melody, Synth, Chords, Progression https://freesound.org/people/ar_jams111/sounds/622845/ Daily Sound # Sweet Chords Ar Jams Freesound.org https://freesound.org/ freesound_org_a85fcdace0ddf299bf2c45ea4f14a5363a322d37 ./freesound/622845__ar_jams111__daily-sound-001-sweet-chords.flac flac a85fcdace0ddf299bf2c45ea4f14a5363a322d37 One day i decided i would upload a sound to soundcloud every day. These days the sounds" are more like mini productions, but this is where it all started. A sweet and simple chord progression and melody. Love, ar_jams111.
Forfatter: Melokacool
00:00
00:29
Ok, i don't know how many of you might be interested in this, but i figure there's no harm in posting it. I'm working on some original songs. Laptop-based, electronic songs, with many orchestral parts, including violin, viola, cello, and string bass. Presonus studio one has some very nice vst string instruments, and i have some really great ones for kontakt. But they all are missing one thing, and i couldn't find the (admittedly esoteric) sound that i'm looking for anywhere on the internet. Being a viola player myself, i recorded myself playing these very particular incidental sounds. Let me explain-. There's this 'grabby' sound that a well-rosined bow makes just is it is first being drawn across the string. Listen carefully to any of the pros and you'll hear it. In your laptop sequences, if used subtly, right at the point where the first note of a phrase is initiated, this sound can give the string part a marked sense of realism*. This, combined with vibrato, reverb and a nice warm/tube/tape saturation setting, nobody will be able to tell the difference between your vst and the real thing. About the audio-i tried to keep them as pitchless as possible, thus not limiting their utility. I recorded two sets of all four open strings (c, g, d, a), first close mic'ed, and once from a few feet away, in stereo. Or to say it another way, the sounds are as follows-1. Open c close2. Open g close3. Open d close4. Open a close5. Open c far6. Open g far7. Open d far8. Open a far. It's totally overkill for me to record all the different versions, but i suppose somebody out there might find one more appropriate than another for their purposes. They work pretty effortlessly for violin and viola, but you might have to pitch them down for cello and string bass. I added no processing whatsoever, apart from normalizing each individual sound. Aiff, recorded at 44/16. Nady scm-2090 stereo condenser mic, focusrite saffire pro 24 interface, recorded in logic. Not the quietest room, but these sounds will be so far down in the mix that it won't matter. Free for all to download, no attribution necessary. Http://www. Freesound. Org/people/bruce%20burbank/sounds/220917/. As an example, here's the part i'm working on that motivated me to record these sounds, with the grabby sound in place. See if you can spot the three times i used it. *pro tip- much the same way i'll insert an inhale breath right before horn or oboe phrases.
Forfatter: Bruce Burbank
00:00
21:21
This is a failed attempt at sampling a rock drumkit on 6 tracks. The channels are as follows:. 0: oh l1: oh r2: kick3: snare4: room l5: room r. I've captured this into ardour 5. 12 using 3 different audio interfaces:. Behringer umc202hd - overheads (dynamic mics)line 6 pod studio ux2 - kick and snare (condenser + dynamic)zoom h2 - room ambience (built-in xy condenser mics). This file is a 6-channel 24-bit flac file encoded using ffmpeg from the raw wav files exported from the original ardour session. There are several issues with this recording however:. 1. The tracks seem to drift, because the individual audio interface clocks were not in sync. The proper way to record multitrack audio is using a single multichannel audio interface - but i didn't have one. 2. There's either x-runs or some usb transfer issues creating small glitches and dropouts in various tracks her and there. Don't know why did this happen, as we've been tracking the real drummer's performance without these issues. Now - fixing these issues manually would be an insane amount of work, but i hope maybe someone has means to either solve them with programming a special tool, or know a tool that could fix these, and make this recorded session ready to be sliced as a drumkit for say - drumgizmo. There's some really good stuff in here - an i was able to cut and mix some really nice drum samples, that i've been using for years, but it's not ready to be fully sliced for maximum flixibility. The instrument was played by myself - it's a drumset by pearl (don't remember the details), owned by the drummer of a band i recorded this with. The band was called small hint - hence the drumkit name. We were recording an ep, and i used some free time left to capture this as well. The ep was never finished and we disbanded soon after. Regarding fixing the issues - here's what i think needs to be done:. 1. I think each hit would have to be automatically phase-aligned on all 6 channels, to correct for the drift. 2. I think it should be possible to automatically detect clicks by simply watching for a sudden change in amplitude between adjacent samples - marking bad areas and then using something like audacity's repair effect to interpolate the waveforms. I think the glitches have much steeper changes in amplitude than even the drum transients, so it should be possible to differentiate between those automatically. If you found a way to fix at least some of these problems - please let me know!. If you've made some "remixes" on freesound - i'd also love to know that. Apart from that - sample what you can out of this and make some sick drum tracks!.
Forfatter: Unfa
3001 - 3019 av 3 019
/ 61