A soprano pipistrelle recorded in the vicinity of maynooth university in september 2019. Originally recorded at 192 khz, this rate has been changed to 16 khz to make the sounds audible. In this extract the bat can be heard echolocating which culminates in a 'feeding buzz' as the bat catches prey. Recorded on a sony pcm d100 using knowles ultrasonic mics. Noise reduction has been applied.
Grasshoppers, wind, light splash of water. Ideal for ambient and creating a relaxing evening atmosphere in nature. Recorded in the countryside on the phone, so there are no sounds of cars, people talking, and so on.
This is what the harp wire strings sound like when pulled really hard so that they hit each other, creating a buzzing sound. (source sound for must 121 musique concrete project, partner: megan berger).
A buzz noise i made when i was pretty hungry and impatient but had to wait to go eat with a companion. It would probably be a good sound at lower level for the hum of some type of machine. (like my stomach. ).