These are two guitar solo outtakes from a guest guitar session i was asked to be on. They essentially wanted that early era slayer vibe where there is more cacophonous noise than structure. I think i recorded 15-20 for two sections in one song. They chose two other files and this was the one i liked best to keep as a memento. I am the creator and owner of the audio contained within the file. I know guitarists these days want to sound like an andy sneap plugin, but this may give someone a different idea. Within the context of the song they were for they fit well. I'm not apologizing for the playing or quality of the recording. Just something i did for a friend that took me 4x as long to set up than total time under the red light. It was fun.
This is the sound coming out of the speaker of an old portable cassette recorder / player, when i push play with no cassette inside. Made in japan by ge, model no. 3-5313a.
A vhs hum noise a made in audacity a month ago, which is used for a game i'm working on. You can change volume to your liking, or just do what ever you want to it. Good for vhs effects!.
Old german black telephone, called w48 by siemens. Build from 1948 to the sixties. Recorded with tascam dr100 mk3 and rode nt3. Some optimizing in cubase.
Sound recordings of real exorcism performed during the second half of the twentieth century, the conditions and names of participants are unknown. It is known that the exorcism took place on the united states.
The same bonnie file but this time run through rx's spectral denoise to clean it up a bit. A little bird noise is still audible between the clicks, but pulling samples from it should be much cleaner and easier to isolate. Enjoy.
This is the door of an old trainstation used for farmer market sell point in cardigan ,pei ,canada. If you passing by, please don’t oiled it,this is a great sound!.
Done entirely on physical scratch recordings, this sound is made to emphasize an old record player in the stereo format. Tascam dr07 mk2, 24bit 96khz, stereo a-b pattern. Much luck!.
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 is an old recording from the year 2001 of a thunderstorm occured on 5th may 2001, at about 2am in pécel (nieghbour town from budapest), hungary. It was recorded by a grundig cr120 and i used audacity to remove the main background noise.
While we were in studio, a friend of mine found out that his drum throne creaks in a cool way. He gave it a little performance, and i got it on "tape". Recorded with a zoom h2 at 96khz/24-bit. Uncut, unprocessed, raw.