326 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "At Home"

00:00
01:10
Typical sound of a spanish mobile grinding shop with its high-pitched whistle. It's a quiet sunday morning in madrid's outskirts and this car loudly announces its services with a speaker. Transcription: 'ha llegado el afilador a su domicilio, a la puerta de su casa. Se afilan cuchillos, tijeras, cuchillas de césped, tijeras de podar y toda clase de herramientas. Pídanos presupuesto sin compromiso. El afilador en su propio domicilio. '. Translation: 'the knife sharpener has reached your front door. Knifes, scissors, mowing blades, pruning shears and all kind of tools may be sharpened. Ask for a free quote. The knife sharpener is at your home. '. Recorded with a huawei smartphone.
Author: Nomadas
00:00
07:33
I tried to get a surround recording using mics, but there was a horrible street musician playing off in the distance. I thought it wouldn't be clear in the recording, but one of the mics picked him up quite well. The recording was ruined, so i did a little processing at home and came up with this freaky bit for your listening pleasure. Not sure if it's usable beyond listening, tho. . .
Author: Markystar
00:00
02:17
A second attempt at recording the deep mud i keep finding myself walking through each morning on walthamstow marshes. This recording was made using a sound devices mixpre6ii and a stereo pair of fel em172 mics (connected to a bent wire clothes hanger and positioned about 30cm above my feet). Processing: normalize -1. 0db, low cut filter 100hz, minor noise reduction to reduce background traffic/train noise. I do not require any credit or attribution. If any of these sounds have been of help, and you are feeling charitable, please do consider donating to freesound to help keep the site running (a link is also on the home page). Any donations are greatly appreciated!.
Author: Walthamstow Walker
00:00
00:02
This lovely little toy piano has been a member of my parent’s home since before i can remember. These days it falls under the jurisdiction of my 4-year old niece, who was ever so kind as to allow me to record it!. It has a fabulous tinkling and out-of-tune carnival sort of sound, and i wanted to capture that before the piano was destroyed altogether. I have editing the original recordings and built a kontakt instrument with them, available for free on my website at www. Framingnoise. Com. Enjoy! and if you want to send me a link to what you’ve done with the piano in the comments below, i surely would love to hear it :).
Author: Framing Noise
00:00
00:12
Recording of a door being opened and closed, and then opened and closed again. Very slight footsteps (on carpet) can be heard. The microphone (sennheiser mkh-50) was intentionally placed about 5 feet away from the door and aimed slightly off-axis so as to capture more of the natural room sound/reverb. I have another recording available of the exact same door and mic setup, but aimed on-axis for a more direct recording (it still has a slight bit of room sound - that was what i wanted for these two recordings). Recorded into a tascam 208i audio interface and into adobe audition. Very minor processing (low-cut at 80hz to remove low-freq rumble).
Author: Ahriik
00:00
00:32
Clean, dry recording of a smartphone touchscreen being rapidly tapped as if a message was being written on it. Could just as easily be used as sounds from using (writing, playing mobile games, browsing, etc) a tablet or really any relatively small touchscreen device. Tapping speed and length between taps varies throughout the recording, but overall i tried to make it sound as natural as possible while still offering options for more granular placement. Recorded with an akg p170 into a tascam 208i audio interface at 48khz/24-bit. Microphone was positioned 5-6 inches away from source. A 120hz high-pass filter was applied to remove unnecessarily pronounced bass frequencies.
Author: Ahriik
00:00
01:07
Field recording captured on february 19, 2022 at 21 hs local time. Located in tolhuin tierra del fuego argentina, lago khami is a big body of water situated in the middle of the island, it extends past the frontier with chile and its home of a great biodiversity, here you can hear it in its most calm form. Recorded by jauke (matias aguilar)in a rode ntg4on a zoom h6original recording in 48khz 16bits. Grabación de campo hecha el 19 de febrero de 2022 a las 21 hs tiempo local. Ubicado en tolhuin tierra del fuego argentina, el lago khami es un gran cumulo de agua situado en el medio de la isla, se extiende pasando la frontera con chile y es hogar de una gran biodiversidad, aquí pueden apreciarlo es su estado mas calmo. Grabado por jauke (matías aguilar)con un rode ntg4en una zoom h6grabación original en 48khz 16bits.
Author: Mapasonoroaustral
00:00
00:03
You hear a male voice saying, "target locked. " followed by target seeking sounds with another male voice saying "engage. " at the end. This sound is a combination of sounds i found here on freesound that i put together for a personal project. Thought i'd share the result. The initial tones are from the following:http://www. Freesound. Org/people/hardpcm/sounds/33213/. The male voice saying "target locked. " is my voice recorded and modified and requires no attribution. :). The target seeking noise is from the following audio clip with adjusted speed:http://www. Freesound. Org/people/benboncan/sounds/61792/. The male voice saying "engage. " is from the following clip:http://www. Freesound. Org/people/qubodup/sounds/67630/. The quick beeping tone during the male voice saying "engage. " is from the following clip:http://www. Freesound. Org/people/leviclaassen/sounds/107786/. Enjoy! if you use this anywhere, i'd love to see it if you could post a link! :).
Author: Wanabeagle
00:00
02:13
Old session file. Check out the session here: https://www. Youtube. Com/watch?v=rk40_lg_vws. Went to the local grocery store to do some stealth recording for my library. This time i promised my self to make my cuts more musical, you guys know, good outside (or) inside recording can be esthetic in many ways. When you walk around and listen carefully, you can hear music everywhere. When i got home i began chopping, an then i realized i could turn this mini recording session into some cool loops as well. I think its a good way of practicing sound design(or anything musically), to just limit your self some times. Basically got the idea when i was studying musique concréte. (concrete music). Could upload the samples if some one is interested?. I used no effects at all, no panning (stereo recordings) or no limiters/compressors. Some of the recording where made by using binaural microphones. I recorded everything with my zoom h4.
Author: Msxp
00:00
03:30
Recording of parakeets being loud in springfield park in easy london at 7:30am in november. This was an unintentional recording as i was testing out some new gear, this meant that i wasn't able to unclip the mics from my rucksack straps and avoid picking up the rustle of my clothes and some breathing. A train and canal boat engines can be heard in the background. This recording was made using a sound devices mixpre6ii and a stereo pair of fel em172 mics. Low cut on the sd which in basic mode is 80hz (i think). There is no processing to this recording other than to ‘normalize’ the levels. I do not require any credit or attribution. If any of these sounds have been of help, and you are feeling charitable, please do consider donating to freesound to help keep the site running (a link is also on the home page). Any donations are greatly appreciated!.
Author: Walthamstow Walker
00:00
03:25
In front of my desk in my room is a wood paneled wall with a cubbie. It's about a foot wide, 10 inches from top to bottom and maybe 7 inches deep. I'm just guessing. Around this cubbie is a border of wood. In the bottom right corner under the border i have jammed one end of an elastic string that used to have glitter on it. It's from a christmas box of chocolates my uncle sent me last year. I stand in front of this cubbie whose bottom is at chin height, (i'm only 5ft1in) so my arms are above my head as i pull this string across the cubbie to the border on the left which acts as my only fret. The string is a few inches longer than the cubbie is wide, but when i pull it it gets longer so my hand is 3/4 along it's length as i pull back and forth across the border to tighten and loosen the string. No matter how hard i pull it never pops loose from it's mooring. The recording starts with me standing up from my chair. In the first part until 01:54 i am playing the string at maybe 30° from horizontal. It has a buzzy quality that reminds me of an african folk instrument i can't remember the name of. From 01:33 to 01:54 i'm trying to imitate a korean folk vibrato kind of thing. In the second part until 02:29 i am playing 45 to 60° from horizontal and it sounds like a full-bodied string bass with no buzz. In the last part beginning at 02:34 i am playing about 75° from horizontal across the top border of the cubbie on the left so it sounds buzzy and african again, and i'm just going crazy goofing around with a crazy bluesy rock sort of rhythm. There didn't seem to be any homemade 1-stringed wall-cubbie basses on this site so here is mine, have fun. I don't play it if mom is home because the living room is on the other side of the wall and she can't hear tv. Also my neighbor can probably hear it in the next apartment lol. Recorded with microsoft lifecam 3000.
Author: Kbclx
00:00
01:52
Another bahai prayer in farsi recorded at home on a minidisc of a friend of mine singing the following prayer: (translation)o thou art turning thy face towards god! close thine eyes to all else, and open them to the realm of the all glorious. Ask whatsoever thou wishest of him alone; seek whatsoever thou seekest from him alone. With a look he granteth a hundred thousand hopes. He healeth a hundred thousand incurable ills, with a nod he layeth balm on every wound, with a glimpse. He freeth the hearts from the shackles of grif. He doeth as he doeth, and what recourse have we? he carrieth out his will, he ordaineth what he pleaseth. Then better for thee to bow down thy head in submission, and put thy trust in the all mercifull lord. The language is old fashioned because the bahai have special requirements about maintaining the integrity of their texts. It is a verbatim quote from an english prayer book. In farsi, for instance, i believe that the masculine gender of god is absent and is really non-specific.
Author: Wingz
00:00
04:09
Each sunday at 8. 00 pm people who are at the moment isolated to their homes go outside and share/make a noise. . . It is a celebration.
Author: Pianofarm
00:00
02:15
This is a reading from the second chapter of "nathaniel's nutmeg: or, the true and incredible adventures of the spice trader who changed the course of history", by giles milton. It is also intended for the freesound sound museum to represent books as what is fading rapidly into obsolescence. By the time you read this, you may not even know what a books is. Books are when the written word is compiled onto sheets of paper in a long-form volume. You may not know what paper is. Paper is commonly used to write on or make oregano cranes with, being flat and thin rectangles made from trees. You probably won't remember what a tree was. That is a very sad thing. They are all gone now, destroyed in feckless deference to paper. When the paper runs out, there will be nothing left to write our collective histories on, what we desperately need. When this occurs, it will stand as the moment our past was truly lost, leaving us lost the same, drifting in circles. Until another man or woman rises up to invent trees again, thus beginning the cycle anew. It's a beautiful idea. We should always be moving towards the future, not lost in syrupy memories of old forests not seen for what they really are: petrified wood and amber. Leave that with the other fossils and relics. Let it be the final page written on the last book until it crumbles to dust. Let it go. The file was recorded using a mid/side stereo technique at 24bits, downsampled to 16bits under the loving care of gaussian dither. The room was treated as best i could to be acoustically pleasing and quiet. I think you will find the noise floor to be particularly well balanced and textured, suitable for post-production tasks, or just for relaxing with at home. .
Author: Stomachache
00:00
04:19
I tried out some new gear and methods! more mountainside rain! a complete storm from beginning to end with swelling and then waning rainfall, occasional thunder. Ms stereo bar on mic stand projected through open second-floor window, just under the roof eaves. Recorded july 20th during one of the mid-afternoon brief intense storms we can seem to get frequently in the rocky mountain foothills beginning around june. If you were listening and wondering, the direct sound of the thunder is somewhat occluded as i believe the storm was behind the overhanging roof and house from the perspective of the microphone array. The mountainous terrain and other objects in the field reflected some of that thunderclap, as well as the exterior wall of the home, and so this is all a little bit funky. Mid-side stereo recording:large diaphragm condensers mounted on octavia stereo mic mounting bar:akg perception 220 mid (cardiod) (on top, upside-down)akg perception 400 side (in bidirectional mode) (on bottom, facing left)sound devices mixpre-6 preamp+mixer+recorder (ch1+2 paired to ms stereo, gain @ +21db, fader @ unity, balance at mid/side center) w/48vdc phantom power applied, on-board mid-side encoding and monitoring in l+r, 24/96khz stereo recording. Postprocessing:cooledit 2000: edited to excerpt from longer recording. Normalized recording to 0db. Downsampled to 16bit 48khz. Flac: encoded.
Author: Chromakei
00:00
00:14
Some of the interference received from nearby homes on my ham radio using a 2 meter band receiver at 144. 989 usb.
Author: Jhill
00:00
00:50
In front of my desk in my room is a wood paneled wall with a cubbie. It's about a foot wide, 10 inches from top to bottom and maybe 7 inches deep. I'm just guessing. Around this cubbie is a border of wood. In the bottom right corner under the border i have jammed one end of an elastic string that used to have glitter on it. It's from a christmas box of chocolates my uncle sent me last year. I stand in front of this cubbie whose bottom is at chin height, (i'm only 5ft1in) so my arms are above my head as i pull this string across the cubbie up and to the left to the border on the top which acts as my only fret. The string is a few inches longer than the cubbie is wide, but when i pull it it gets longer so my hand is 3/4 along it's length as i pull back and forth across the border to tighten and loosen the string. No matter how hard i pull it never pops loose from it's mooring. This time the mic is sitting in the cubby so i get a much clearer and louder sound. When i stretch the string across the top it has a fairly long sustain, so i can play 4 notes on a single pluck.
Author: Kbclx
00:00
00:01
This is a collection of "small room reverb" impulse responses that i sampled in a new england home known as butternut lodge, built and owned by actress bette davis back in 1940. It consists of all wooden rooms with many non-parallel surfaces, rugs and furniture and includes 3 round-shaped "silo" rooms! these rooms sound clean and do not have the irritating "ping" of many rectangular rooms. Short history/pictures of butternut (https://www. Airbnb. Com/rooms/24692769?source_impression_id=p3_1659215694_liuasyfxoceab5fn). Although these round shapes (and some of the other very small rooms) could potentially wreak havoc with phase at specific frequencies when summed to mono, i recorded this using the mid/side mic technique; therefore, the "side" channels fully cancel out, leaving a clean monaural reverb signal. These irs are stored as flac files. They can be used directly by any daw without conversion and have the added feature of being id3 tagged with a photo of the room each ir is taken from. After downloading, select view -> large icons in the folder to view the rooms. I sampled each room using a swept sine wave into a jbl flip 6 bluetooth speaker; recorded through a tascam tm-st1 m/s stereo microphone, feeding a tascam dr-07 recorder @ 24-bits 44. 1 khz and deconvolved using reaper. As of this post, i've been using these rooms for about 2 weeks. So far, i've found the "garage" to sound fantastic on drums! the drum sound! also, many of the other smaller rooms have a great effect on guitars, keys, and hand percussion. Each room varies in tone and brightness, so i've found that selecting/tuning the reverb send works well if approached like an eq. Increase the effect send until the instrument "feels" right (then perhaps back off slightly). A close-miked acoustic guitar, for instance, will take on a nice brightness and 3-d quality; not particularly reverberant, just big. At that point, i recommend applying any eq, compression, and bigger-sounding reverb effects. Hopefully you enjoy this. Please let me know how you like it and if you have any suggestions. Cheers!. Ken.
Author: Kenmix
00:00
06:01
We Three Kings performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 7 from A Holiday Note From Home (2005). Recorded June 20-24 & July 7, 2005 at Bias Studios. Credits: Alto Saxophone [Jazz] – MSgt Andy Axelrad* Alto Saxophone [Lead] – TSgt Lucas Munce* Artwork [Cover] – Stewart Andrews Baritone Saxophone – TSgt Doug Morgan* Bass – CMSgt Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – CMSgt Dudley Hinote* Cello – MSgt Frank McKinster*, MSgt Vivian Podgainy* Directed By – SMCgt Joe Jackson* Directed By [Assistant] – MSgt Rich Sigler* Double Bass – MSgt William Hones* Drums – TSgt Dennis Hoffmann* Edited By – MSgt Alan Baylock*, SMSgt Joe Jackson*, MSgt Rich Sigler* Engineer – Bob Dawson Guitar – TSgt Geoff Reecer* Management – CMSgt Dudley Hinote* Management, Directed By [Strings] – CMSgt Jane Bockenek* Mastered By – Charlie Pilzer Mixed By – MSgt Alan Baylock*, SMSgt Joe Jackson*, MSgt Rich Sigler* Percussion – SMSgt Pat Shrieves* Photography By – A1C Rusti Caraker*, Thomas Devins Piano – MSgt Steve Erickson* Producer – SMSgt Joe Jackson* Producer [Assistant] – MSgt Alan Baylock* Strings – The United States Air Force Strings Tenor Saxophone [Jazz] – MSgt David Stump* Tenor Saxophone [Lead] – TSgt Tedd Baker* Trombone [Jazz] – TSgt Ben Patterson*, MSgt Jeff Martin* Trombone [Lead] – SMSgt Joe Jackson* Trumpet [Assistant Lead] – MSgt Kevin Burns* Trumpet [Jazz] – MSgt Rich Sigler*, MSgt Tim Leahey* Trumpet [Lead] – TSgt Brian MacDonald* Viola – TSgt Bryce Bunner*, SMSgt Paul Swantek*, MSgt Sharon Bingham Wolfolk*, TSgt Wayne Graham*, TSgt William Hurd* Violin – MSgt Alexander Dean*, MSgt Cleveland Chandler*, SMSgt Deborah Volker*, TSgt Emily Barnes*, TSgt Gregory Pinney*, TSgt Henry Tyszler*, CMSgt Jane Bockenek*, TSgt Luke Wedge*, TSgt Mari Uehara*, TSgt Mark Dorosheff*, TSgt Mark Helm*, SMSgt William Tortolano* Vocals – TSgt Paige Wroble*
Author: Composition: John Henry Hopkins; Arrangement: MSgt Jeff Martin; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
00:00
05:24
Oy Chanukah performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 11 from A Holiday Note From Home (2005). Recorded June 20-24 & July 7, 2005 at Bias Studios. Credits: Alto Saxophone [Jazz] – MSgt Andy Axelrad* Alto Saxophone [Lead] – TSgt Lucas Munce* Artwork [Cover] – Stewart Andrews Baritone Saxophone – TSgt Doug Morgan* Bass – CMSgt Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – CMSgt Dudley Hinote* Cello – MSgt Frank McKinster*, MSgt Vivian Podgainy* Directed By – SMCgt Joe Jackson* Directed By [Assistant] – MSgt Rich Sigler* Double Bass – MSgt William Hones* Drums – TSgt Dennis Hoffmann* Edited By – MSgt Alan Baylock*, SMSgt Joe Jackson*, MSgt Rich Sigler* Engineer – Bob Dawson Guitar – TSgt Geoff Reecer* Management – CMSgt Dudley Hinote* Management, Directed By [Strings] – CMSgt Jane Bockenek* Mastered By – Charlie Pilzer Mixed By – MSgt Alan Baylock*, SMSgt Joe Jackson*, MSgt Rich Sigler* Percussion – SMSgt Pat Shrieves* Photography By – A1C Rusti Caraker*, Thomas Devins Piano – MSgt Steve Erickson* Producer – SMSgt Joe Jackson* Producer [Assistant] – MSgt Alan Baylock* Strings – The United States Air Force Strings Tenor Saxophone [Jazz] – MSgt David Stump* Tenor Saxophone [Lead] – TSgt Tedd Baker* Trombone [Jazz] – TSgt Ben Patterson*, MSgt Jeff Martin* Trombone [Lead] – SMSgt Joe Jackson* Trumpet [Assistant Lead] – MSgt Kevin Burns* Trumpet [Jazz] – MSgt Rich Sigler*, MSgt Tim Leahey* Trumpet [Lead] – TSgt Brian MacDonald* Viola – TSgt Bryce Bunner*, SMSgt Paul Swantek*, MSgt Sharon Bingham Wolfolk*, TSgt Wayne Graham*, TSgt William Hurd* Violin – MSgt Alexander Dean*, MSgt Cleveland Chandler*, SMSgt Deborah Volker*, TSgt Emily Barnes*, TSgt Gregory Pinney*, TSgt Henry Tyszler*, CMSgt Jane Bockenek*, TSgt Luke Wedge*, TSgt Mari Uehara*, TSgt Mark Dorosheff*, TSgt Mark Helm*, SMSgt William Tortolano* Vocals – TSgt Paige Wroble*
Author: Composition: traditional; Arrangement: MSgt Steve Erickson; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
00:00
07:58
Hark, the Herald Angels Sing performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 4 from A Holiday Note From Home (2005). Recorded June 20-24 & July 7, 2005 at Bias Studios. Credits: Alto Saxophone [Jazz] – MSgt Andy Axelrad* Alto Saxophone [Lead] – TSgt Lucas Munce* Artwork [Cover] – Stewart Andrews Baritone Saxophone – TSgt Doug Morgan* Bass – CMSgt Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – CMSgt Dudley Hinote* Cello – MSgt Frank McKinster*, MSgt Vivian Podgainy* Directed By – SMCgt Joe Jackson* Directed By [Assistant] – MSgt Rich Sigler* Double Bass – MSgt William Hones* Drums – TSgt Dennis Hoffmann* Edited By – MSgt Alan Baylock*, SMSgt Joe Jackson*, MSgt Rich Sigler* Engineer – Bob Dawson Guitar – TSgt Geoff Reecer* Management – CMSgt Dudley Hinote* Management, Directed By [Strings] – CMSgt Jane Bockenek* Mastered By – Charlie Pilzer Mixed By – MSgt Alan Baylock*, SMSgt Joe Jackson*, MSgt Rich Sigler* Percussion – SMSgt Pat Shrieves* Photography By – A1C Rusti Caraker*, Thomas Devins Piano – MSgt Steve Erickson* Producer – SMSgt Joe Jackson* Producer [Assistant] – MSgt Alan Baylock* Strings – The United States Air Force Strings Tenor Saxophone [Jazz] – MSgt David Stump* Tenor Saxophone [Lead] – TSgt Tedd Baker* Trombone [Jazz] – TSgt Ben Patterson*, MSgt Jeff Martin* Trombone [Lead] – SMSgt Joe Jackson* Trumpet [Assistant Lead] – MSgt Kevin Burns* Trumpet [Jazz] – MSgt Rich Sigler*, MSgt Tim Leahey* Trumpet [Lead] – TSgt Brian MacDonald* Viola – TSgt Bryce Bunner*, SMSgt Paul Swantek*, MSgt Sharon Bingham Wolfolk*, TSgt Wayne Graham*, TSgt William Hurd* Violin – MSgt Alexander Dean*, MSgt Cleveland Chandler*, SMSgt Deborah Volker*, TSgt Emily Barnes*, TSgt Gregory Pinney*, TSgt Henry Tyszler*, CMSgt Jane Bockenek*, TSgt Luke Wedge*, TSgt Mari Uehara*, TSgt Mark Dorosheff*, TSgt Mark Helm*, SMSgt William Tortolano* Vocals – TSgt Paige Wroble*
Author: Composition: Felix Mendelssohn; Arrangement: TSgt Ben Patterson; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
00:00
05:48
O Christmas Tree performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 5 from A Holiday Note From Home (2005). Recorded June 20-24 & July 7, 2005 at Bias Studios. Credits: Alto Saxophone [Jazz] – MSgt Andy Axelrad* Alto Saxophone [Lead] – TSgt Lucas Munce* Artwork [Cover] – Stewart Andrews Baritone Saxophone – TSgt Doug Morgan* Bass – CMSgt Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – CMSgt Dudley Hinote* Cello – MSgt Frank McKinster*, MSgt Vivian Podgainy* Directed By – SMCgt Joe Jackson* Directed By [Assistant] – MSgt Rich Sigler* Double Bass – MSgt William Hones* Drums – TSgt Dennis Hoffmann* Edited By – MSgt Alan Baylock*, SMSgt Joe Jackson*, MSgt Rich Sigler* Engineer – Bob Dawson Guitar – TSgt Geoff Reecer* Management – CMSgt Dudley Hinote* Management, Directed By [Strings] – CMSgt Jane Bockenek* Mastered By – Charlie Pilzer Mixed By – MSgt Alan Baylock*, SMSgt Joe Jackson*, MSgt Rich Sigler* Percussion – SMSgt Pat Shrieves* Photography By – A1C Rusti Caraker*, Thomas Devins Piano – MSgt Steve Erickson* Producer – SMSgt Joe Jackson* Producer [Assistant] – MSgt Alan Baylock* Strings – The United States Air Force Strings Tenor Saxophone [Jazz] – MSgt David Stump* Tenor Saxophone [Lead] – TSgt Tedd Baker* Trombone [Jazz] – TSgt Ben Patterson*, MSgt Jeff Martin* Trombone [Lead] – SMSgt Joe Jackson* Trumpet [Assistant Lead] – MSgt Kevin Burns* Trumpet [Jazz] – MSgt Rich Sigler*, MSgt Tim Leahey* Trumpet [Lead] – TSgt Brian MacDonald* Viola – TSgt Bryce Bunner*, SMSgt Paul Swantek*, MSgt Sharon Bingham Wolfolk*, TSgt Wayne Graham*, TSgt William Hurd* Violin – MSgt Alexander Dean*, MSgt Cleveland Chandler*, SMSgt Deborah Volker*, TSgt Emily Barnes*, TSgt Gregory Pinney*, TSgt Henry Tyszler*, CMSgt Jane Bockenek*, TSgt Luke Wedge*, TSgt Mari Uehara*, TSgt Mark Dorosheff*, TSgt Mark Helm*, SMSgt William Tortolano* Vocals – TSgt Paige Wroble*
Author: Composition: traditional; Arrangement: MSgt Rich Sigler; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
00:00
07:33
Go Tell It on the Mountain performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 19 from A Holiday Sampler (2009). Track 1 from A Holiday Note From Home (2005). Recorded June 20-24 & July 7, 2005 at Bias Studios. Credits: Alto Saxophone [Jazz] – MSgt Andy Axelrad* Alto Saxophone [Lead] – TSgt Lucas Munce* Artwork [Cover] – Stewart Andrews Baritone Saxophone – TSgt Doug Morgan* Bass – CMSgt Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – CMSgt Dudley Hinote* Cello – MSgt Frank McKinster*, MSgt Vivian Podgainy* Directed By – SMCgt Joe Jackson* Directed By [Assistant] – MSgt Rich Sigler* Double Bass – MSgt William Hones* Drums – TSgt Dennis Hoffmann* Edited By – MSgt Alan Baylock*, SMSgt Joe Jackson*, MSgt Rich Sigler* Engineer – Bob Dawson Guitar – TSgt Geoff Reecer* Management – CMSgt Dudley Hinote* Management, Directed By [Strings] – CMSgt Jane Bockenek* Mastered By – Charlie Pilzer Mixed By – MSgt Alan Baylock*, SMSgt Joe Jackson*, MSgt Rich Sigler* Percussion – SMSgt Pat Shrieves* Photography By – A1C Rusti Caraker*, Thomas Devins Piano – MSgt Steve Erickson* Producer – SMSgt Joe Jackson* Producer [Assistant] – MSgt Alan Baylock* Strings – The United States Air Force Strings Tenor Saxophone [Jazz] – MSgt David Stump* Tenor Saxophone [Lead] – TSgt Tedd Baker* Trombone [Jazz] – TSgt Ben Patterson*, MSgt Jeff Martin* Trombone [Lead] – SMSgt Joe Jackson* Trumpet [Assistant Lead] – MSgt Kevin Burns* Trumpet [Jazz] – MSgt Rich Sigler*, MSgt Tim Leahey* Trumpet [Lead] – TSgt Brian MacDonald* Viola – TSgt Bryce Bunner*, SMSgt Paul Swantek*, MSgt Sharon Bingham Wolfolk*, TSgt Wayne Graham*, TSgt William Hurd* Violin – MSgt Alexander Dean*, MSgt Cleveland Chandler*, SMSgt Deborah Volker*, TSgt Emily Barnes*, TSgt Gregory Pinney*, TSgt Henry Tyszler*, CMSgt Jane Bockenek*, TSgt Luke Wedge*, TSgt Mari Uehara*, TSgt Mark Dorosheff*, TSgt Mark Helm*, SMSgt William Tortolano* Vocals – TSgt Paige Wroble*
Author: Composition: traditional; Arrangement: MSgt Alan Baylock; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
00:00
29:21
Calm ambient track. Winter woods / pinewood february 12. 41 pm (noon) in the netherlands near village giersbergen. Bram’s admin request-text and my answer in audio. Hello freesounders,it happens very infrequently that i post requests. However, i have an extraordinary sad reason to do so today. I don't want to go into detail in this public forum, but someone incredibly important and incredibly young in my life and my wife's just passed away. I am thus looking for an extra long recording of a peaceful "forrest ambience" to play during the good-bye ceremony. Something with some birds and perhaps some wind through the leaves,. . . . Currently the ceremony is planned for april 6th so i would need this before then. I know i can look through freesound, but i would like something specifically recorded with this in mind, something we will be able to listen to later as well, remembering this important and sad time in our life. . . Yours in grief,- bram & familywhat you hear;general-noise; soft wind in woods, sometime a bit increasing. A far kid at the edge of hamlet giersbergen. Far hum of the woods. Remark that the far high altitude planes are on a very lo noise level. Off and on craws and woodpeckers. 00. 00-02. 18 clean background-sound02. 18-06. 57 far high altitude plane- 04. 08-05. 42 people passing06. 05- 08. 13 clean background-sound- 07. 15-08. 12 woodpecker08. 16-10. 33 far high altitude plane10. 33-11. 44 clean background-sound- 10. 44-11. 32 (far) woodpeckers11. 33-12. 53 far police serine12. 55-14. 11 clean with some far yelling kids and woodpeckers14. 15-16. 14 far high altitude plane16. 14-26. 11 clean background-sound with some friendly increasing wind gusts- 23. 06-23. 56 woodpeckers- 25. 53-26. 08 woodpecker26. 08-end far high altitude plane and people. More recordings here search: giersbergen. About the area, national park loonse en drunense duinen. (text by irma de potter,ranger of this area) dutch website: https://www. Natuurmonumenten. Nl/natuurgebieden/nationaal-park-loonse-en-drunense-duinen. In the loonse en drunense duinen you will find forest, heathland and especially a lot of sand. It is one of the largest shifting sand areas in western europe. The wind can blow undisturbed in many places, resulting in an ever-changing landscape. By purchasing it in 1921, it has been protected for 100 years and we can still enjoy this brabant sahara today. You can roam freely on the sand plain. So there is plenty of room to explore extensively. Marvel at the submerged trees, enjoy the chirping field crickets and quench your thirst at one of the many cafes or restaurants on the edge of this nature reserve. Walking, cycling or on horseback: it's all possible here. With the wind in your hair and the sand in your shoes. You may even come across the sheep herd. The sheep keep the heath short and eat away saplings. This is how they keep the area open. The loonse en drunense duinen still has 270 hectares of shifting sand. That sand creates rather extreme conditions: the soil is dry and nutrient-poor. The difference in temperature between day and night can be as much as 50 degrees celsius. This ensures a unique flora and fauna. The animals and plants have adapted or feel at home in drought, aridity and temperature fluctuations. Sand sedge and various lichens, for example. And the viviparous lizard, sandpit beetles and sand bees. All species that love sand. In the last ice age, the polar winds blew sand from the north to brabant, where it remained in thick packages. For a long time this sandy plain was covered with primeval forests. Until the fourteenth century the trees were felled by people. They used the wood as fuel. The bare plain was filled with heather, where the farmers grazed their cattle. This intensive grazing and the sod cutting of the soil depleted the soil. This gave the sand free play. For a long time, the sand was a major problem for the residents. Villages and fields threatened to disappear under it. Trees were planted to stop the advancing sand. You can still see the traces of this today: find the submerged trees that only peak above the sand hills with their crowns. Date/time: february 15th tuesday 2017, start 12. 44 pm. Weather: 13c, clear sky, wind se 2-3bft , 1023 hpa. Mic pointed ne. Location; soft-wood-forest giersbergen (drunen), national park “loonse en drunense duinen”, drunen, noord-brabant, netherlands (holland), europe geo 51. 65566 5. 15774. Gear chain: sennheiser mkh30/50 ms, in rycote cyclone small, windjammer > sound devices 302 >tascam dr-100 mk2. Low cut 140hz 6db/octave. Level around -33db for background. Decoded mid-side to stereo.
Author: Klankbeeld
00:00
00:29
A futuristic deep (deeper than my previous effect) male voice (possible robotic or drone) commanding to "return to your homes" perfect for use as background in music such as techno or dubstep. If you use this, please contact me on this site or e mail me at airborne80@gmail. Com so that i can see/hear your work. Thank you and have fun!.
Author: Airborne
00:00
36:37
11/29/2018 - burbank, california. Rain, flooding, and mudslides come to california when a sudden storm hit today. Most people got off the freeways quickly and tried to protect their homes from water damage. This recording was recorded with a zoomh4npro (2018) set at 120 degree field-pattern mode. The zoom was placed on a tripod facing out a 3rd floor window into a dead-end alleyway below. This recording is great atmospheric sound. The water can be heard trickling off spanish tile rooftops and dripping from overflowing terracotta pots. From the passing cars on a distant highway, to the occasional cough of a homeless gentleman walking on the street below, this recording is genuine and clean. Imagine adding that sound of a metal garbage can and a shrieking cat in the night! a sound that's great for sleeping or portraying a dark alley in gotham!. Enjoy!. Christopher c. Courter.
Author: Courter
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