10 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Phase Shift"

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00:32
Phase shifted fibonacchi sequence for a scalar wave.
Author: Jesusrave
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02:18
Cinematic This piece originally found on glbtm* - Phase Shift
Author: Phase Shift
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03:11
Cinematic This piece originally found on glbtm* - Phase Shift
Author: Phase Shift
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00:06
Just a small test with harmonics, and placing a floor and ceiling on some sine waves.
Author: Yvessch
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00:12
The sound of altered states.
Author: Breviceps
00:00
00:47
Another reversed noise from the nothing that is space.
Author: Aceinet
00:00
00:04
This second sound is a recorded sound of a bike chain, i modified it using some effects :1-normalize2-wahwah effect with-frequency = 3. 3 hz-start phase = 0-depth = 70%-resonance = 2. 5-wah frequency shift = 30%3-melt closingthe final sound gives an impression of a sound under water.
Author: Iut Paris
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00:04
A jazz sample at 130 bpm composed on fl studio. The left channel preceding phase shift was implement by the removal of a sinelike oscillation. I deleted a left channel sinelike oscillation after the attack (and actually i omitted one more oscillation, because i didn't want to remove the very energetic ones).
Author: Veiler
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01:01
Thanks to cinematic-laboratories for the source from didge-morph. Wav and makenoise for their brilliant gear!. Morphagene settings slf full blue. Morph full cw shift controlled by tempo of o-ctrl. Mimeophon and erbe-verb used for final outputs. Rendering in reaper 48khz, 32 bit. Feel free to put in your own markers wherever you wish.
Author: Jim Bretherick
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01:25
Ocean waves recorded from between two rocks. Recorded on a zoom h4 with the mics covered in zeppelin fur at 44100 hz 24-bit. There's some slight wind noise that can be filtered from 150hz downward. This is part of a series of recordings for an ambient music project i'm working on. There are some excellent ocean recordings on freesound if you're looking for a more traditional ocean sound, but my intent with these clips was to try to capture some natural phase-shifting by placing the h4 in cracks and crevices for a more hollow, "closed-in" sound.
Author: Greysound
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