Ave Maria composed by Charles Gounod. Ave Maria was composed based off of the harmony and texture of Johann Sebastian Bach's Prelude No.1 in C Major from Well-Tempered Clavier Book I (BWV 846).
Author: Composer: Charles Gounod (1818–1893) Contemporary Performer: John Michel, a cello professor at Central Washington University
Field recording made at boston's north station commuter rail terminal, summer 2005. Sounds include footsteps, indistinct conversation and background chatter, and periodic departure announcements.
The general ambiance of summer in a back yard, similar to the background of a park bench: a songbird periodically repeating, the distance sounds of some traffic, a cop's whistle, wind through the trees, and some squirrels barking.
I was watching the mlp episode where they get sucked into the comic book, and pinkie pie made her cute little "whee" sounds periodically, so it made me wanna do an impression of it.
This sound happened by accident. Guaranteed there's no duplicate sound out there. I tried to separate the rings by a suitable time period to sound realistic, and spaced at the end so it could be looped to ring for as long as you need.
This is a low hum sound generated by my naturalnoisegen program. Naturalnoisegen uses several timed generators to produce complex natural noises. In this case, 500 very low frequency generators with a long period were used.
Wistful posthumous letter between ignorant white and modest black, who are now fond friends. Of course, there is no escaping the white guy blundering his way through conversation.
Derivated work: Theme A from "Almande de don Frederice" (w:Pierre Phalèse), as heared and writted down by User:Kychot Čeština: Téma A z "Almande de don Frederice" (w:Pierre Phalèse), jak je slyšel a zapsal User:Kychot
The data contained in this file should represent a full period sine wave. But because of the bug(s) in the header of wave file, it gets distorted (i. E. If you found the bug and fixed it in binary, you'd get perfect sine wave).
This was recorded at a home and hardware chain store. Along with the general ambiance, a recorded announcement comes over the speaker periodically, requesting that a qualified employee is needed in the "board-cutting area".
This is the sound of an old tankless toilet, ca. 1945, with a flushometer mechanism being forced to cycle water for an extended period of time after flushing. Recorded with a zoom h1n and it's internal microphones.