This is a recording i made at the front of my house after a storm. I used a pair of akg c1000's going in to my mixpre6 in ortf configuration about 15 metres from the sound source. Recorded in suburban melbourne australia.
This is a recording i made during a lull in a storm, i recorded in ortf configuration with a pair of akg c1000's through a mixpre-6. I pointed the mics at my neighbour's house which had an overflowing gutter/drainpipe making the water slap on to the concrete. Recorded 2017 in melbourne australia.
Better set on monoaural on your daw if possible due to the off-center recording. Having been a bit ill on some rich iron content food i couldn't stomach (offal it was, it was the sheep fried liver who was the culprit - the very rich iron content upset my stomach pretty bad - was looking for something "new". ). Keep in mind that i am unable to do this as a request for obvious reasons including health, livelihood and risk of damage to equipment. I tried very hard to avoid shaking the zoom as not to make the wobbling sounds. If i am ill again, i'll use my ma-2 (microphone stick) and gravity microphone stand and get a real good recording of real vomiting but keep in mind this was recorded in my showerroom so some er may occur.
The sounds of water dripping from my a/c into a bucket. If you used this sound and would like to credit me, i would be honored, but if not, that is fine as well. Hope this helps in anyway.
A reverberation of the drip7 sample. Quite dramatic, possible applications could be a sad person crying and the last drop is emphasized in the shot or a lonely alleyway. . . Maybe even an underground water system.
Footsteps in wet coarse sand, close up, some steps in water. Little low frequency boom noise should be remove. France, 2009. Recorded with schoeps cmc6 mk41recorded on soundddevice 744twave mono, 16 bits, 48khz.
Sound of a single droplet. The standard sound for like a leaky faucet or a drop hitting a puddle or bucket of water. I actually made this sound with my mouth and tapping my cheek at the same time, but it is a very convincing drop sound, which can easily be looped at the speed you want for that "continuous drop" sound in the background.
I recorded this sound in a large greenhouse where all the plants were getting watered by an automatic system. You can hear the leaves getting hit by water. It might also sound like rain to some if you disregard the background noise of the water rushing through the little streams.
Rain falling on leaves. Also can hear a car driving in the background. Recorded with: sony ecm-ms907-->sony mz-r66 md recorder-->imac line-in-->dsp-quattro-->wav. No effects applied, only editting was taking out some noisy parts.
Other placesrecorder: zoom h2 / other portable devicesoftware: pro tools / audacity / ocenaudio. Your comments are greatly appreciatedcheers, piotr zaczek.
The sound of two people's footsteps walking on a cement sidewalk after a little rain. This was recorded in-person with a tascam dr-40 stereo recorder. Public domain: i have released this audio file into the public domain. It is free for anyone to download, modify, or use without my consent and without attribution - like all freesound audio files should be. Enjoy!.
This is a 2 bar 120 bpm bassline with one dry and one wet play thru. The effect on the wet half is a simple filter morph, raising the cut-off on a low-pass filter thru-out the loop.
This is a singing glass with a cat meowing in the background. 1. Hold the empty wine glass on a tabletop at the base of the stem with one hand. 2. Wet the index or middle finger of your other hand with some water. 3. Lightly rub your wet finger along the rim of the glass. 4. As you rub the glass, you will hear the "singing" sound of the glass. You may have to re-wet your finger periodically and/or adjust the pressure of your finger on the rim of the glass to keep producing the sound. 5. You can change the pitch of the sound by adding water to the glass. Minidisc.
Recorded in my bathroom sink, water drops dripping into some water. Recorded on a tascam dr-40; cleaned up in audacity. If you use it, shout-outs welcome: production-now. Com.
The sound was recorded with a yeti blue microphone in my room (which is not soundproofed). It is a recording of a turkey baster dropping water into a bowl full of water. Sound has many patterns of water droplets.
An organic squishy sound. Very wet and slimey sounding. Taken by getting a large bowl of very thick noodle soup at cold temperature and stirring it with a spoon.