Recorded with a zoom h1 n. Waves lap gently against the sand shore, absorbed by tons of freshly strewn kelp. It is near a tide turn, so the wave action is relatively gentle. The sounds are more like lapping, and not crashing. It is a very gentle sound.
Processed sound effect created with civil war cannon field recordings captured at fort jackson in savannah, georgia in the spring of 2019, for savannah college of art & design.
Intense sea waves, caused by a ship from far away approaching. The bassy sound belongs to that big ship. Water collides with the shingles creating a unique and impressive sound effect. Recorded with zoomh6 & xy capsule.
A piece of pump organ improvisation with very little harmonic movement, but much space for the "breathe" of the instrument and the superposition (german schwebung) between the tones, the tones that swing between the tones in different time and tones. Excuse my english, i hope one can still understand. P. S. Start and ending must probably cut off :-).
I'm not a sound pro. These sea sounds are recorded with a simple smartphone and exported as wav files. If you do not want the wind noise on the microphone, it is stereo so you can remove the "windy" track if you do not want it. All free to use, no credit required. Enjoy and go create something fabulous!.
Waves with an interesting stereo effect. No processing, this is the original recording. Recorded on phone. I was lucky to be on the beach when there were no people there, so there are no extraneous noises.
This is the sound of the sea on vagueira beach on a sunny winter day: 12h00 am 25fev2019. It was recorded with the internal micros of a tascam dr70. Ab_pair @ 48kh24. Wav.
A 10 min recording made at a beach resort on the fiji coral coast in july 06, recorded on a pd-170 camcorder with 2 sennheiser mkh416 in crossed stereo configuration. Original is 48khz, 16 bit. I have a higher bit rate version if you like this one.
Recording done on a windy day, at a floating jetty placed between two concrete piers at lake heddal in norway. Microphone: sennheiser ambeo vrrecorder: zoom f6converted from ambisonic a format to binaural stereo.
Very bass harmonics for kick (to be played in parallel) and at lower volume for snare and tom bass harmonics. It was created by filtering a 60 hz sine wave (remove all the high frequencies but also the extreme low).
Recorded at hammonasset state park in connecticut in a rocky section of the beach. Waves hitting boulders of various sizes causes sloshing and splashing sounds. Recorded with a tascam dr-05 using a fur windscreen. Some noise removal in audacity (to remove noise from a plane that briefly passed by).