Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning, a song by Irving Berlin produced on U.S. Army time for the Army benefit show, Yip Yip Yaphank (1918). This recording, by Irving Kaufman, is from about 1919 - the University of California Santa Barbara gives it as "191-", and it cannot, of course, predate the song. While the sound quality is somewhat poor, the lyrics used here are likely nearer that sung in Yip Yip Yaphank than the standard ones given in the sheet music, making it useful. This is Indestructible Record #1569.
Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning, a song by Irving Berlin produced on U.S. Army time for the Army benefit show, Yip Yip Yaphank (1918). This recording, by Irving Kaufman, is from about 1919 - the University of California Santa Barbara gives it as "191-", and it cannot, of course, predate the song. While the sound quality is somewhat poor, the lyrics used here are likely nearer that sung in Yip Yip Yaphank than the standard ones given in the sheet music, making it useful. This is Indestructible Record #1569.
I recorded this many years ago on an imac g3 in 2008, the sound was recorded using the imac headphone jack into my desktop pc at the times audio in. I ended up doing this as my dsl went down for several days and i managed to get netzero working. I then uploaded the video to youtube where it has received over 10 million views. Https://www. Youtube. Com/watch?v=gsnar6fruo0. In 2012 a wonderful poster was made by oona räisänen, if you want a technical breakdown of what's going on in my audio have a read. Http://www. Windytan. Com/2012/11/the-sound-of-dialup-pictured. Html.
Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning, a song by Irving Berlin produced on U.S. Army time for the Army benefit show, Yip Yip Yaphank (1918). I believe the version used in the show used the opening verse from the Irving Kaufman recording; the opening verse here was probably made for publication. This is Edison Blue Amberol #3639, which was created using Edison Diamond Disc matrix #6287.
Author: Irving Berlin (1888-1989) Arthur Fields (1888-1953)
Telephone 70s circle dial dialing recorded using a sennheiser wireless dynamic ew135g2 microphone through a yamaha dm1000 digital console with cubase software.
A recording of the audible beep the modem makes on a pc when booting. I literally had to hold a microphone up to the motherboard's modem so it's not a very good quality recording.
Full matrix is a compilation audio i mixed and recorded from: jm_fx_matrix sound 02 julien matthey scroll_matrix. Wav melissapons telephone ring xyzr_kxfor use in a streaming underground hip hop music video show.
Recording of a 1993 mcdonalds 'sound machine' toy's clicking dial as i wind it forwards and backwards. Some squeaking of the plastic as the knob turns. Recorded with a blue yeti usb microphone in cardioid mode. No post-processing. Could be used for a plastic safe sound or winding a toy.
In an antique store in laconner, washington i saw a old black desk rotary dial telephone. I dialed the numbers 1 through 0 and recorded them on my cell phone. It's a fairly clear recording and different from the other rotary dial sounds here. I rolled off the low end a bit to get rid of some ambient noise in the store.
Sound of someone dialing a cell phone. Created for a production of sideways stories from wayside school. Created using this sound:http://www. Freesound. Org/people/smileysamm/sounds/208942/. Edit: i see a lot of people are enjoying this sound! if you'd like to donate a dollar or two towards my personal starving artist fund here is a donation link: https://www. Paypal. Me/baharv89.
I used audacity with an internal mic to record this. Its good quality though. i just dialed some numbers on my house phone with the dialtone at the beginning. Its very clear there might be some background noise though.
I decided to record my daughter voice saying daddy wake up (baba=daddy), i love her voice, it is better than any other wake up alarm. I liked to share it maybe others can find it useful.