Took this off a video i was making. There seems to be a strange click just before each time the crow makes it's "caw" sound. Maybe that's what they always do but i've not noticed before.
At the end of each summer, crows gather and prepare for the migration souththis is a recording of them as day was breaking. There are sounds of foot steps as i slowly made my way to the location they were roosting. I tried to record for a bit before i moved closer. . . . . . . . . .
This is about a 30 sec. Urban field recording of several crows flying around the neighborhood and talking with one another. Recorded early on a december sunday morning in suburban san diego, california. Some distant jet noise in part of the sample. Assembled from three short recordings made with a digital still camera.
In the morning (6h00), at the noyers-sur-serein camping. 2018/05/20. Lots of …. Crows (?), church bell at the end. Recorded with a rode nt4, sound devices sd302 and olympus ls100.
An edited audio file where i got the cry of a (presumably) crow - used adobe audition to use sound remover to remove background noise and then dereverb to make it a bit more clean and clear.
House crows cawing is one of the most ubiquitous sounds of urban india. These particular crows were recorded near my house with a marantz pmd 661 mk ii and sennheiser k6/me66.
Sound description: hundreds of crows squawking on a breezy afternoon. In nature you have a "gaggle" of geese or a "pod" of whales, but a "flock" of birds, if they happen to be crows is actually called "a murder of crows". An appropriate name if you happen to be standing underneath hundreds of them in the trees. They emit a murderous ;) squawk and screech for hours. This was a digital audio recording, done at 48 mhz at a group of trees a mile from a country freeway. You can still hear the ambient sounds of the distant cars.
Recording of crows that i've denoised and looped. There's a weird woosh in it, it was a plane or something flying by that i couldn't fully remove. Recorded using a sony ic recorder, processed in fl studio to remove noise.
The caws were recorded with a usb-stick mic, but i forget the particulars of exactly when and where i was. There are many variations to the call of crows, both singularly and in unison. I captured just a few of the individual variety.