Brief field recording of a breezy day in a local park (east coast of the u. S. ) i believe a blue jay is the bird heard in this recording but i am not certain. Wind, distant bird calls. Recorded using a tascam dr-40x. Raw recording.
This is a recording (made with an iphone) of a bird with a cool call. I have no idea what bird it is. . . I'm not an expert on those things. Xd. The cool call starts a few seconds in. :). There is a little background noise (someone digging with a shovel and some wind). Feel free to use this sound however you wish. . . No attribution required, though i'd appreciate it if you did! :). Comments are always appreciated! :).
Cute weird monster hit, hurt or idle sound. Think of a big, wiggly cartoonish bug. Made with the goal to replace hurt2. Wav in freedink. Remix of cc0 sound https://freesound. Org/people/bymax/sounds/327991/.
All week, flocks of corellas (a type of white cockatoo found in australia) were filling the air and so was their screeching sound. They would frequently perch in trees and take off again, making everyone in the neighbourhood look outside their windows.
A uniden phone recorded with a consumer camera with built in microphone, (sony-cybershot). This was listened to on a television set and it sounds like the actual thing! on the computer it doesnt sound anything like the real thing. You're welcome and good luck using this sound.
Rooster crowing. Processed with silence at either end, because there was some random ambiance that didn't add to the recording. Not quite the cliche "cock-a-doodle-doo," but it's clean and it works. Taken at an animal sanctuary with a zoom h2 in 120* pattern.
Sound source: https://freesound. Org/people/mafon2/sounds/540633/from mafon2. Second version. Convert to 48khz 32 bit wav. Add 32 splices with reaper. Morphagene high speed forwards (fully cw) morph fully cw. Gene size 12 o'clock. Splices shifted randomly using stepped output from wogglebug. Reverb erbe-verb. Mimeophon karplus strong sequenced by o-contrl random tempo with wogglebug woggle output. X-pan fully engaged this timewant to know more? get in touch.
This is the original star trek communicator "beepbeep" incoming call sound (not the "open" sound). Created with nativeinstruments b4 hammond organ simulator, patch #97.
A simple sine wave beep running through soft saturation and modulation, then being exported deliberately at 8khz and 8bit to simulate the low quality of a phone call. Use this as a standard beep sound coming through a phone speaker. The latter half is a little faster to enable a simulation of hanging up or the call being rejected.
A recreation of the sound effect made when a communicator beeps. This is not the same as the "chirp" made when the communicator is flipped open, but the "ringtone. ". A simple sine wave at the appropriate frequency, beeped twice.