Musical sound effect (logo, bumper, sweeper, drop) to be used in radio or podcast production. Separate elements also included in the file. 16bit wav file, normalized to (around) -20db rms.
I was driving during a storm and my radio started going weird on me, i took out my phone and recorded it. Sounds trippy with a lot of echo and a phaser.
Created this sample using only audacity. I started off by generating a square wave chirp between 10000 and 20000 hz on a mono track, copied this created a stereo track and messed around with timestretching and low pass filtering until i got the desired sound.
Strange radio interference picked up between radio channels at 3am one morning. (i'm reasonably sure this some sort of strange em phenomenon rather than someone else's composition being broadcast; if i am wrong, i will be happy to take it down. ).
A simple sine-generator piped through a slew of wacky effects automated with randomized lfos. I added some cabinet emulation to give it a 'living room' feel but left it dry enough to add additional stereo/reverb processing. P. S. It loops cleanly. Software: bitwig studio.
Just some white noise recorded from a car radio. All my sounds are fully free to use, but please consider leaving a comment to let me know how you'll be using them. Just curious! :).
Following the latest ‘dare the community’ i’ve finally hooked up my dirt cheap rtl software radio dongle to the formerly disused ‘masthead amplifier’ on our roof. Here are some english truckers(?) chatting over cb radio. They seem to be talking about one of their mates growing a beard and suggesting they ‘give him a quran’.
I've scanned the radio frequencies with an old radio and recorded with my tascam dr-05 via the headphone jack. You can hear some weird looping patterns and sound fragments from random radio stations.
Amateur radio. Ham radio on the 80m band. Recorded in the netherlands. The term "amateur" is used to specify "a duly authorised person interested in radio-electric practice with a purely personal aim and without pecuniary interest. Subject in chat: the men talk about the technical aspects of the equipment they use. Language: germanradio receiver: http://websdr. Ewi. Utwente. Nl:8901/frequency: 3694 khzrecorded: november 2021.
Various recordings of a real noise of a small radio. Fm-noise is at the beginning of the file and am starts at 1:08 till the end. Recorded with zoom h4n pro.