This is the second of two fx i've posted of the beast i used for beauty and the beast in our theatre. I was having a terrible time finding a good sound so i just pitch shifted my own voice down an octave. This is the second where the beast is panting just before his second entrance. The other one is 3 growls (and one meow) of the beast. Enjoy. Kp.
This file is an extraction of 0 second to 4 second from the following filehttp://freesound. Org/people/iluppai/sounds/148845/it is for audio signal processing for music application. The link for the class is:https://class. Coursera. Org/audio-002/. .
A 1906 recording of American composer Scott Joplin's Maple Leaf Rag (1899) played by the United States Marine Band. This is one of the earliest known recordings of this work by Joplin (according to a discography of 78rpm recordings of Joplin works compiled by David A Jasen in "Scott Joplin - Collected Piano Works" 1981). Converted from MP3 to Ogg Vorbis with a slight trim of the beginning and end by Major Bloodnok. The discography of Joplin's work on 78 rpm records compiled by David A Jasen in "Complete works of Scott Joplin" indicates this is the third known recording of the Maple Leaf Rag. Edward A Berlin's book "King of Ragtime" in a note on p310 indicates that the recording of 1902 listed by Jasen is not infact the work by Joplin, making the 1906 recording the second existing record. Edwards's web-page and this page demonstrate that there are no known existing copies of the 1903 cylinder recording by Wilbur Sweatman and His Band.
This kind of noise consists of a certain number of random values per second. This number is the density. In this example there are 10 random values per second. The algorithm for this noise was created two years ago by myself in c++, as an imitation of noise generators in supercollider 2.
Pentax k1000 load film and shutter clicks. The first one with 1 second of exposure. The second one with 1/8s. The third and fourth - 1/125s. The last 2 clicks with 1/1000s. Recorded with h4n, 24/48.