473 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Hit Glasses"

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A tiny snippet of some random kitchen noises. Captured using the zoom h5 with its included xy stereo microphone. Cut in ocenaudio. It's always nice to hear what projects you use these sounds for. Let me know!.
Author: Cabled Mess
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Layered car crash sound effect. Created using a noise box (quality street) filled with grit, broken glass and other bits and bobs. Also used a recording of a metal filing cabinet being hit for that metallic impact. 24bit 48 khz stereo.
Author: Squareal
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This was a tape cassette and case thrown against a wall, this represents a solid plastic object being thrown or dropped from a height and smashing on the floor with a piece of plastic breaking off and hitting the ground for the 2nd impact.
Author: Bexhillcollege
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00:51
Raindrops hitting my bedroom window. Recorded in carson, ca. Used a zoom h6 with the xy attachment and windscreen on, pressed mics against window for a contact recording. This was done in order to capture full resonance of the glass. (geotag is not at my actual address, but a nearby location. ).
Author: Cliftonmcarlson
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00:40
My mother in the kitchen just around the corner from my closed bedroom door getting some ice from a square ice bucket in the freezer which is right at the entrance to the kitchen. You can hear them drop into her big glass and pop when they hit the water. I was recording out the window at the time. You can hear an american robin, red cardenal and mourning dove as well.
Author: Kbclx
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00:18
This is the sound of attempting to uncork a bottle of champagne with a saber, but, after a few practice hacks that hit the glass neck of the bottle, accidentally cutting off the bottle at the neck. Champagne explodes out and drips onto the ground, which is grassy and dry. Recorded with a boom microphone onto a p2 card via a panasonic hvx200 digital video camera.
Author: Elizagoode
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Intense sudden light, its has positive magic vibes. . . Is the sound you would put when u get a correct answer in a contest or something like that. . . It also feel like when u get an idea. Its base are metalic and glass-breaking sound effects, put them in reaper and playin with a lot of meq's and synth filters.
Author: Sailorerick
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Vidrinho. Wav, som de um conjunto de garrafas de vidro juntas, batendo uma nas outras, pode ser usado em qualquer tipo de filme onde existam carros ou caminhões transportando alguma coisa de vidro, gravado no estúdio da escola ort do rio de janeiro, em fevereiro de 2022. Os equipamentos são: um microfone- shotgun shure vp89, e uma placa de áudio - behringer u-phoria umc404 hd, foi um exercício de foley. Vidrinho. Wav, the sound of a set of glass bottles together, hitting each other, can be used in any type of film where there are cars or trucks transporting something made of glass, recorded at the ort school studio in rio de janeiro, in february 2022. The equipment is: a shure vp89 shotgun microphone, and an audio card - behringer u-phoria umc404 hd, it was a foley exercise.
Author: Escola Ort
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This is a reverse ricochet accent i made from scratch. I took the classic “h-b cartoon ricco” and modified it to make it look like an approaching bullet is coming to shoot a glass object or hit a hard surface. You can use this sound however you want. Just give me credit!.
Author: Wannymanny
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I have recorded the noise made by blowing in a glass bottle and i have added a “wahwah effect”. Then, i have recorded a sound made with my thumb and the bottleneck. I have changed the speed ant cut it. Then, i have recorded the noise made with my hand hitting the bottleneck. I have used the effect “blend in closing” and changed the height. This sound can be used as a loop. I used audacity.
Author: Iut Paris
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Two whine bottles hit each other and create a cling-sound. Wave, 44. 1khz, 24bit, stereorecording device: zoom h6 with xy-capsulelow-cut: yes (80hz)normalized to -1dbfslocation: supermarket by the main campus of leuphana universitylat: 53. 227284227904676lon: 10. 401225686073303date: 2013-11-19, 16:30h. Recorded and edited by: julia rehfeldt. This recording was created in the framework of the seminar "soundscape leuphana (ws13/14)".
Author: Soundscape Leuphana
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02:14
In this sample you hear a recording from inside a well sound insulated room, directly under the roof of a house. Strong rain hints the roof and produces low frequency muted sounds. In the background you hear the constant noise of the rain, coming through the window. There are also a few raindrops hitting the glass of the window. The sample was recorded using the built-in stereo microphone of a zoom h4n recorder. It was slightly processed to remove unwanted low and high frequencies which were not related to the actual recording. If you use this sound, please add a comment or send a private message what you created using it. :-).
Author: Erbsland Music
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02:38
It's a recording of a calcium-sandoz® forte/fuerte 500 mg effervescent tabled falling into a glass of water and dissolving. You can hear the tablet dropping into the water and water droplet hitting water surface back. After w while - co2 buubles start to appear creating noisy sound. The recording has a long natural fadeout and unfortunately some background noise. I leaved "silence" before the sound starts so you can de-noise the recording to your needs (i prefer audacity for denoisig). Recorded inside of my wardrobe for acoustic isolation using zoom h2 on a mic-stand. Recoded as 96khz/24-bit wav. Normalized, truncated and convertet do 16-bit flac using audacity. I've converted this to 16-bit as it still has plenty of noise and 24-bits would not be any better after normalization.
Author: Unfa
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Clean, dry recording of a roughly half-filled metal can (the ribbed kind used for most canned food - probably steel, tin, or a blend of the two) containing dry oatmeal being shaken. A variety of forces and speeds were used to create a diverse assortment of sounds. Originally recorded specifically for canned oatmeal sounds, but could easily work for shaken cans containing most kinds of tiny, dry granules such as rice, nuts, grains, etc. A metal can was used for the unique, metallic timbre it produces - a glass jar or plastic container would sound different. Recorded with a behringer xm8500 directly into a steinberg ur22c interface at 48khz, 32-bit float. True 32-bit, not just 24-bit upconverted.
Author: Ahriik
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