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. :-).
Rain on a roof through an open window. Drops foreground are striking zinc very next to the mics. Other raindrops on the slate roof. Water falling from the gutter on a concrete floor further. Very nice thunderclap at 1'42"a low cut filter should be used to avoid some bass frequency in the wind. France, 2020listen also to "continuous thunderstorm" https://freesound. Org/people/bruno. Auzet/sounds/531041/recorded a few minutes before. Recorded with 2 clipy em172 in an ab setrecorded on sounddevice mixpre6stereo, 48khz, 24 bits.
Snow melting off my roof and dripping down the downspout from the gutter. Recorded on a tascam dr-40 and cleaned up in audacity. Shout-outs welcome: production-now. Com.
Piano Roll recording of Scott Joplin playing "Maple Leaf Rag" in 1916. Midi conversion by PlayerRoll, and found at: http://www.pianola.co.nz. Re-recorded as audio by Major Bloodnok using Cubase. The original Piano Roll had been scanned and converted to a MIDI file by PlayerRoll, but the work remains in the public domain. This is one of a number of rare recordings by Joplin. It also demonstrates the deterioration of his health, specifically its impact on his piano playing. Original UniRecord, 1916. Maple Leaf Rag published 1899. Українська: Скотт Джоплін грає композицію реґтайму «Maple Leaf Rag» у 1916 році.
Al Jolson's recording of George Gershwin's "Swanee". Composed in 1919, Al Jolson recorded for Columbia Records in January 1920, and it became a runaway hit
Author: Sung by Al Jolson (1886– 1950) Composed by George Gershwin (1898 – 1937) Lyrics by Irving Caesar (1895 – 1996)
Here is a recording of raindrops dripping on the roof of a rental car. Recorded in the interior of the vehicle. It seems to form a repetitious pattern.
Actually is not rain. It is snow melting down from a roof, falling into puddles and onto a corrugated roof. I placed the microphone (zoom h2) on different spots in 4channel sorround mode. I just normalized them and mixed them into stereo. Thats it. In this case the mic is placed on the ground in the middle of the puddles and the roof. Feel free to vote and leave a comment, maybe letting me know how you are going to use it :). You can easily loop the sound without a notable cut in the mix. Cheers, pillo.
Moderate rain on a metal roof (some variation) with drops into puddles and rolling thunder. Water on roof recorded from the outside rather than the inside (ie no echo or reverb).
The Canadian national anthem, "O Canada", played by the United States Navy Band in the early 2000s. The song was originally commissioned by Lieutenant Governor of Quebec Théodore Robitaille for the Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day ceremony, 1880. The music was written by Calixa Lavallée as a setting of a French Canadian patriotic poem composed by Sir Adolphe-Basile Routhier. The lyrics were translated to English in 1906, Robert Stanley Weir wrote another English version in 1908, which were revised thrice before taking their current form in 2018. Was converted to Ogg format using Audacity (Originally uploaded on en.wikipedia).