12 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Sleeping Room"

00:00
05:08
Dog sleeping in living room. May be able to hear ticking clocks in background.
Author: Oundmurf
00:00
01:36
Dog sleeping in living room. May be able to hear ticking clocks and dishwasher running from kitchen.
Author: Oundmurf
00:00
04:14
Dog sleeping in living room. May be able to hear ticking clocks and dishwasher running from kitchen.
Author: Oundmurf
00:00
00:36
A construction noise that wouldn't let me sleep in my room im madrid.
Author: Alicemachado
00:00
00:05
A new born baby laughing.
Author: Iamgiorgio
00:00
01:27
Recorded this sound on my xaomi redmi prime 3s mobile phone in a natural setting inside the living room. This recording has been done in bangalore, karnataka, india at around 18 hrs ist on december 10, 2016.
Author: Swapnil Gt
00:00
00:12
Varous sounds on pillows (grabbing, leaning back, etc. ), stereo, 24 bit/48 khz, -6 db, recorded 2020, with zoom h5.
Author: Jay You
00:00
02:00
Noise of my room while i'm sleeping. Normalized. Probably mostly just noise of the device. Recorded with zoom h2. Edited with audacity. This sound is cc0 but i highly recommend that you include a link to this page when using it, to avoid misunderstandings. Http://farm9. Staticflickr. Com/8070/8213683889_517a10ef52_o. Pngon flac and ogg vorbis audio file formats. Contact me if you have interest in specific sounds for open source or commercial purpose.
Author: Qubodup
00:00
01:37
A gentle sounding music box inside a teddy-bear. Use freely. Km201-> uln-2. Http://www. Reuven. Nl/?page_id=106.
Author: Yuval
00:00
30:02
Recording of a vintage room fan (bond air recirculator). Bass is boosted and the sound is reversed. Very relaxing, noise masking, sleep-inducing sound especially good for those people with tinnitus.
Author: Impulse
00:00
02:32
An actual new production instead of old stuff! made in june of 2020. A dark intro implies the humming engines of the spaceship you're in as you're traveling at speeds unimaginable. Slowly the ship starts to spring to life. As you open your eyes, slow but huge bands of light sweeps across your cryogenic sleeping pod, as if being scanned. The pod starts to move while you're still in it, going through chambers filled with machinery and bleeping computer stations, until it stops in front of a huge closed door. Suddenly, your pod opens up as well as the door. Your eyes are greeted with the majestic sight of a gigantic control room with windows as far as the eyes can see, galaxies fills your field of view, a beautiful synergetic view of the grandeur of space and the hundreds of lights of the control room, welcoming you to a new adventure. 2 simple chords form the basis of a textural composition supplied with sound effects. Plugins used: ni kontakt 5 with atom hub's the planet, doom by sampletraxx, space by rigid audio, ni absynth, and massive vst synths. Extra sound effects: shocking signal and ui designer by sampletraxx, heavily sampled and mangled. Effects: izotope mastering plugins, a bunch of fl studio stock reverb and eq, guitar rig 5, blackhole reverb, replika xt, raum reverb.
Author: Burning Mir
00:00
05:01
While working on another audiobook, i decided to make this sound. It's 38 voices, each saying different things, panned around and mixed together, creating a "wall of sound" that speaks like 38 radio channels at once. Recorded with a zoom h2 via usb into ardour2. Mixed and exported to flac with ardour2. Ps: it's all polish (with some possible german shout-outs), but the amount of noise makes it almost completely incomprehensible. Only a few words that are being yelled in a different voice can be understood. No sound repeats here, no recycling - every voice and every second of this recording is unique. Yes, it required quite a lot of work to record so much talking in quality! it's almost an entire audiobook squeezed into 5 minutes. Strangely (or not) listening to this makes my mind rest, because the noise blocks all other sounds from the environment - making my mind free of stimulation, allowing for sleep-like rest state. The signal is so much modulated that it appears to be not modulated at all - like static you get from a fm radio of you tune it wrong. The brain receives less data when you listen to this, than when you sit in a room hearing even faint (but distinct) noises from outside, other rooms, other people or yourself. This is sound masking in action. A very interesting psychoacoustic property of human hearing. Also: this is an interesting material to study of my voice's spectral energy distribution while speaking (as opposed to singing). As you can see using the spectrogram view, most energy is present in the band below 600 hz.
Author: Unfa
1 - 12 of 12
/ 1