. Welcome to the roots messenger multiverse. This is a september 24th 2013 field-recording, which i took in heidelberg's old citycenter in the late afternoon, while working at the heidelberg laureate forum 2013. You will hear a general streetnoise with motorbikes/cars passing by, people talking and laughing and finally a beautiful streetmusician's flute and singing by one of his collegues. All my recordings are stereo, recorded with zoom h2. To be continued. . .
It's a raw nearly minute-long recording of an electric fan running. Sounds similiar to a little aeroplane motor mid-air. Recorded using a zoom h2. Originally 96khz/24-bit wav. Converted to flac using audacity.
This recording i did to a short film, it is a miks of several microphones in motor biheind the car and near the wheel. I used dpa dpa lavalier mkh 406 schoeps cmc 5 and mkh 60.
Loop-able. Constant buzz from a slightly broken water pump on a small water feature. Recorded from multiple areas of the fountain. Running water can be heard in the background. Recorded on a zoom h4n recorder.
A passing grocery cart corralling machine used in parking lots to assist with returning buggies to the store. The presumably electric motor and slight jiggle of the metal carts can be heard. Sound is loopable.
A recording of me moving my h4n zoom recorder left then right a couple of times near the motor of my room fan. The result is a rumbling, wooshing kind of effect. Sound is in stereo, and is in. Wav format.
It's a recording of a walkman playing a compact cassete (shut in a drawer for acoustic isolation). It's there, just really quiet. The recording is raw (unprocessed). You can hear the motor working as the tape plays, and then it buzzing as the tape finished. Recorded with zoom h2. Edited and normalized with audacity.
Banger, horns, city rumor and motor are the background of this call to prayer recorded in tripoli, lebanon, 2009. Recorded with audiotechnica at822, xyrecorded on tascam dap1,stereo, 16 bits, 48khz. Hypnotic call to prayer.