8 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Pis"

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Efeito sonoro gravado nos estúdios de áudio da universidade anhembi morumbi para a disciplina "captação e edição de áudio" do curso de rádio, televisão e internet pelos estudantes: amanda cristine cardarelli, ana luíza righi schleich, paulo henrique nonato e rany de souza corrêa. Trabalho orientado pelo prof. Felipe merker castellani.
Author: Amandacardarelli
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The song Good Morning to All composed in GarageBand.
Author: Eirik1231
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*Pi on C. π = 3.14159 = 1981.79 (octave and 781.79 cents) cents. MIDI pitch bend: 79,59
Author: Hyacinth
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*Wallis product (pi/2) on C. π/2 = 781.79 cents. MIDI pitch bend: 22,90 on P5
Author: Hyacinth
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Water falling into water. It could be used as pee.
Author: Kd Jack
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Just intonation minor chord from maurolupo’s “ahohe” (211961, “girl's voice singing”). Https://www. Freesound. Org/people/maurolupo/sounds/211961/. Used sonic pi to add a minor third (315. 641 cents) and a perfect fifth (701. 955 cents) while maintaining the duration. Code snippet:```sample dir, "ahohe"sample dir, "ahohe", pitch: 3. 15641sample dir, "ahohe", pitch: 7. 01955```.
Author: Ethnographer
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This is the recording of an audible pedestrians traffic light in paris, france. These devices are here to help visually impaired people cross the streets in a safe way. They come under the form of a little beige box with a hidden button underneath. You have to push the button to hear the annoucement. You can find them all over the city. The sequence goes as follows: first, an annoucement in french says "red light for pedestrians", followed by the street name, then a jingle goes on, followed by a series of bell-like sounds, signaling a green light. I maed this recording because i needed that particular sound for a show i was working on and couldn't find it on freesound. Recorded with a zoom h2n in stereo m/s mode (set to mono).
Author: Schafferdavid
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Uploaded on request - a chime that comes from a speaker inside ferrograph branded pis displays when a special message pops up on the screen; most commonly "stand well away", platform alterations or when a correction is made to the train arrival order. Commonly heard around railway stations in the south of england.
Author: Liam
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