43 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Anniversary"

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02:03
This is my first attempt at recording myself. Just messing around for a few minutes checking out my new tascam dr-0550th anniversary stratocaster, 1967 blackface fender bassman, route 66 compression pedal.
Author: Bluesbondsman
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01:08
Dining room ambience, tambourine and guitar,with waiters singing 'happy birthday to you'.
Author: Phonoflora
00:00
03:09
Recorded may 23rd 2022 at noon for the 70 year anniversary of the first siren test in sedgwick county, kansas. (april 22, 1952). 50-65 feet from the siren. This thunderbolt was installed in 1952 and remained until sometime between 2012 and 2015 when the siren head was replaced with a newer bolt. The original controls and blower remain, however.
Author: Mordeby
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02:05
New Britain, which is the well-known melody to w:Amazing Grace (String version), 50th Anniversary (2004, track 18)
Author: James Carrell/David Clayton/w:John Newton, performed by United States Air Force Band Strolling Strings
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02:26
Miserlou performed by the Strolling Strings of the United States Air Force Band. Track 23 from The Strolling Strings 50th Anniversary (2004).
Author: Composition: traditional; Arrangement: Robert Walters; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Strolling Strings; Recording: United States Air Force
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02:06
Amazing Grace performed by the Strolling Strings of the United States Air Force Band. Track 18 from The Strolling Strings 50th Anniversary (2004).
Author: Composition: traditional; Arrangement: Cleveland Chandler; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Strolling Strings; Recording: United States Air Force
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02:56
Espana performed by the Strolling Strings of the United States Air Force Band. Track 15 from Air Force Strolling Strings 40th Anniversary (1994).
Author: Composition: Emmanuel Chabrier; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Strolling Strings; Recording: United States Air Force
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03:49
Pachelbel's "Canon" performed by the Strolling Strings of the United States Air Force Band. Track 22 from The Strolling Strings 50th Anniversary (2004).
Author: Composition: Johann Pachelbel; Arrangement: Frank Hudson; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Strolling Strings; Recording: United States Air Force
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02:06
Maple Leaf Rag performed by the Strolling Strings of the United States Air Force Band. Track 3 from Air Force Strolling Strings 40th Anniversary (1994).
Author: Composition: Scott Joplin; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Strolling Strings; Recording: United States Air Force
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03:37
Core 'ngrato performed by the Singing Sergeants of the United States Air Force Band. Track 5 from The Singing Sergeants 50th Anniversary (1945-1995) (1995). Major Mark R. Peterson.[1][2]
Author: Composition: Salvatore Cardillo; Lyrics: Riccardo Cordiferro; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Singing Sergeants; Recording: United States Air Force
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02:51
La Danza performed by the Strolling Strings of the United States Air Force Band. Track 17 from Air Force Strolling Strings 40th Anniversary (1994).
Author: Composition: Gioachino Rossini; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Strolling Strings; Recording: United States Air Force
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01:49
Air Force Hymn performed by the Singing Sergeants of the United States Air Force Band. Track 14 from the band's 1995 album The Singing Sergeants 50th Anniversary (1945-1995)
Author: Composition: Henry Baker; Lyrics: Mary Christian Dundas Hamilton; Arrangement: Floyd Werle; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Singing Sergeants; Recording: United States Air Force
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01:22
Flight of the Bumblebee performed by the Strolling Strings of the United States Air Force Band. Track 23 from Air Force Strolling Strings 40th Anniversary (1994).
Author: Composition: Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Strolling Strings; Recording: United States Air Force
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02:31
The march "Joyce's 71st New York Regiment" by Thornton Barnes Boyer (1881), played by the United States Navy Band directed by Ned Muffley for the 1978 album "Tour de Force" (reproduced in "75th Anniversary Collection", 2000).
Author: United States Navy Band
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03:29
Slavonic Dance No. 2 performed by the Strolling Strings of the United States Air Force Band. Track 8 from Air Force Strolling Strings 40th Anniversary (1994).
Author: Composition: Antonín Dvořák; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Strolling Strings; Recording: United States Air Force
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02:11
Skip to My Lou performed by the Singing Sergeants of the United States Air Force Band. Track 3 from The Singing Sergeants 50th Anniversary (1945-1995) (1995). Major Mark R. Peterson, commading officer.[1]
Author: Composition: traditional; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Singing Sergeants; Recording: United States Air Force
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02:22
America the Beautiful performed by the Singing Sergeants of the United States Air Force Band. Track 24 from The Singing Sergeants 50th Anniversary (1945-1995) (1995). Major Mark R. Peterson, commanding officer.[1][2][3][4]
Author: Composition: Samuel A. Ward; Lyrics: Katharine Lee Bates; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Singing Sergeants; Recording: United States Air Force
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03:19
21 Hungarian Dances, WoO 1, No. 4 performed by the Strolling Strings of the United States Air Force Band. Track 13 from Strolling Strings 40th Anniversary (1994). Chief Master William Slusser, director.[1][2][3]
Author: Untitled
00:00
03:37
Core 'ngrato performed by the Singing Sergeants of the United States Air Force Band. Track 5 from The Singing Sergeants 50th Anniversary (1945-1995) (1995). Major Mark R. Peterson.[1][2]
Author: Composition: Salvatore Cardillo; Lyrics: Riccardo Cordiferro; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Singing Sergeants; Recording: United States Air Force
00:00
03:22
21 Hungarian Dances, WoO 1, No. 4 performed by the Strolling Strings of the United States Air Force Band. Track 13 from Strolling Strings 40th Anniversary (1994). Chief Master William Slusser, director.[1][2][3]
Author: Untitled
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01:02
Bach's Invention No. 8 in F Major, BWV 779 performed by the Strolling Strings of the United States Air Force Band. Track 10 from Air Force Strolling Strings 40th Anniversary (1994).
Author: Composition: Johann Sebastian Bach; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Strolling Strings; Recording: United States Air Force
00:00
02:22
America the Beautiful performed by the Singing Sergeants of the United States Air Force Band. Track 24 from The Singing Sergeants 50th Anniversary (1945-1995) (1995). Major Mark R. Peterson, commanding officer.[1][2][3][4]
Author: Composition: Samuel A. Ward; Lyrics: Katharine Lee Bates; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Singing Sergeants; Recording: United States Air Force
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02:11
Skip to My Lou performed by the Singing Sergeants of the United States Air Force Band. Track 3 from The Singing Sergeants 50th Anniversary (1945-1995) (1995). Major Mark R. Peterson, commading officer.[1]
Author: Composition: traditional; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Singing Sergeants; Recording: United States Air Force
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04:38
The Battle Hymn of the Republic performed by the Singing Sergeants of the United States Air Force Band. Track 20 from the band's 1995 album The Singing Sergeants 50th Anniversary (1945-1995). Also published as track 14 from Heritage to Horizons (2007).
Author: Composition: William Steffe; Lyrics: Julia Ward Howe; Arrangement: Floyd Werle; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Singing Sergeants; Recording: United States Air Force
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01:25
Second Suite in F for Military Band "III. Song of the Blacksmith" performed by the 553rd United States Air National Guard Band of the Northeast. Track 4 from Golden Anniversary (1992). Major Patrick M. Jones, commander and conductor.[1][2]
Author: Untitled
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03:17
Second Suite in F for Military Band IV. "Fantasia on the Dargason" performed by the 553rd United States Air National Guard Band of the Northeast. Track 5 from Golden Anniversary (1992). Major Patrick M. Jones, commander and conductor.[1][2]
Author: Untitled
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05:17
Second Suite in F for Military Band I. "March: Morris dance, Swansea Town, Claudy Banks" performed by the 553rd United States Air National Guard Band of the Northeast. Track 2 from Golden Anniversary (1992). Major Patrick M. Jones, commander and conductor.[1][2]
Author: Untitled
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02:33
Second Suite in F for Military Band "II. Song Without Words, I'll Love My Love" performed by the 553rd United States Air National Guard Band of the Northeast. Track 3 from Golden Anniversary (1992). Major Patrick M. Jones, commander and conductor.[1][2]
Author: Untitled
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05:51
The Fighters of Korea (traditional U.S. Air Force songs including "Will You Go Boom Today" [a.k.a "If you fly"], "Itazuki Tower" [a.k.a. Air Force 801, set to "Wabash Cannonball"], and "Jet Combat" [a.k.a "Song of the Sabres" or "The Mission"] performed by the Concert Band of the United States Air Force Band. Track 10 from Heritage to Horizons (2007). Previously published as track 4 from United States Air Force 40th Anniversary (1987).[1][2][3]
Author: Composition: traditional; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Concert Band; Recording: United States Air Force Band
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00:46
Big ben strikes 3 o'clock for the 70th anniversary of ve day.
Author: Thehymnplayer
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01:52
Hark! The Herald Angels Sing is an English Christmas carol which first appears in its modern form in 1850. The original lyrics are adapted from Charles Wesley's 1739 hymn ""Hark! how all the welkin rings", set it to the same tune as Christ the Lord is Risen Today. George Whitefield altered the opening lyrics to the more familiar "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing", and various others also made small alterations in the following years. In the early 1840s, Felix Mendelssohn wrote "Festgesang", a cantata in celebration of the presumed 400 year anniversary of Johannes Gutenberg's invention of the printing press. The tune to the second part of this piece, "Vaterland, in deinen Gauen", was adapted to fit the revised Wesley lyrics in 1855 by William H. Cummings, assembling the hymn tune into its more-or-less final form. It is performed by the chorus of U.S. Army Band "Pershing's Own", led by Colonel Thomas Rotondi, Jr. (Leader & Commander) and CSM Debra L. McGarity (Command Sergeant Major) c. 2010.
Author: Untitled
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00:01
The beat for my happy birthday remix song to celebrate rolling sky’s 7th anniversary.
Author: Gussgaming
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00:28
Some weird horns i recorded at the hamburg port anniversary 2013. This horns are the weird, powerless ones, i believe. Unfortunately a little bit muddled with people nearby me.
Author: Ckater
00:00
02:59
Here is a recording of a firework display that was put on to celebrate the 100 year anniversary of the bridge in eglisau switzerland. 96khz 24bit/s.
Author: Astounded
00:00
03:20
Powerful sound of sirens and horns from 71st anniversary of warsaw uprisingrecorded with zoom h4n + rode mic. Please, let me know, if you use it somehow.
Author: Szczur Banshee
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01:51
This good boy is not good player. I think he used bad keyed text recorded in keying memory. I heard him more times and always with the same punk keying. "the rl was founded 1937 and we are proud to celebrate our 75th anniversary". . . Says web http://www. Rlx. Lu/lx_awards_files/rl_75. Htmbut operator cannot be proud of his keying. Old good radio luxembourg 208 m use to be much better radio http://www. Offringa. Nl/radioluxembourg. Htmlater i found that lx7rl is station of lx amateur radio society anniversary celebration.
Author: Okhas
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02:16
The recording was taken on the centennial anniversary of mount mary university in milwaukee, wisconsin using an iphone. The bell, in notre dame hall, rang 100 times, once for every year (duh, lol).
Author: Iskweldog
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01:22
Part of special permitted radio traffic on days of the 100th anniversary of titanic tragedy. Czech amateur radio station ok2bvg sending cq on 502,4 khz (medium wave - frequency similar to titanic mgy station used frequency). Received in jn79nd location.
Author: Okhas
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04:11
Part of special permitted radio traffic on days of the 100th anniversary of titanic tragedy. Czech amateur radio station ok2bvg in contact on 502,4 khz (frequency similar to titanic mgy station used frequency) with german station sending on 3538 khz. Received in jn79nd location.
Author: Okhas
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07:35
The city is crying in the 83rd anniversary of the death of the republic of turkey's first president and most important political figure, mustafa kemal atatürk. November 10, 202109:03. Istanbul, eminonu, galata bridge11°c, mostly cloudywind 26 km/hthe intense smell of fish and sea. Rode nt2-a omnidirectional mode.
Author: Ercanbektasulger
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06:13
23 april 1920 is the foundation of the grand national assembly and is a public holiday in turkey. Because of pandemic, turkey celebrated 100th anniversary from balcony. Anthems have played, firework shows have watched, lights have turned on and off, sirens have heard, people have applaud. Recorded by zoom h6.
Author: Arin Nehir
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02:43
I made the recording in the town of denholm in scotland. In the recording you can hear fireworks, firecrackers. You can also hear the sounds of conversations in the crowd, screams of children, the sounds of a burning fire. On november 5 this year people across the uk light bonfires, let off fireworks, and burn effigies of a man named guy fawkes. The reason we do this is because it’s the anniversary of the gunpowder plot (1605); a failed attempt to blow up the houses of parliament in london by a group of dissident catholics.
Author: Balanceofsounds
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01:18
The chimes of big ben first appeared on bbc radio at the very end of 1923 to announce the new year. In december 1948 this recording (catalogue number 825677) marked the 25th anniversary of big ben’s broadcasting career. Because the recording was made inside the tower there’s plenty of intriguing mechanical detail in addition to the tolling of the quarter bells and the 13-ton great bell. Big ben is the unofficial name for the great bell. Other london bell names include great paul and great tom in st pauls cathedral, and the inscribed names on the bells of st mary-le-bow in cheapside: katherine, fabian, christopher, margaret, mildred, faith, augustine, john, timothy, pancras, cuthbert and bow. Recording © copyright bbc. Audio digitisation and restoration by the london sound survey. Many thanks to bbc worldwide for granting permission to reproduce this recording here.
Author: Thehymnplayer
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