31 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Stanley"

00:00
01:37
This is the sound of me lightly scraping a stanley knife on a macbook pro. Recorded on a tascam dr-40.
Author: Jimmybombimmy
00:00
02:27
When The Mockingbirds Are Singing In The Wildwood by Frank C. Stanley
Author: Frank C. Stanley
00:00
00:09
Me saying. . "you mess this up. . Ill introduce you to uncle stanley" in an east end london accent.
Author: Aarongbuk
00:00
02:27
When The Mockingbirds Are Singing In The Wildwood by Frank C. Stanley
Author: Frank C. Stanley
00:00
00:04
My son making a growling/groaning sound.
Author: Wjoojoo
00:00
00:50
My son singing mary had a little lamb in the car.
Author: Wjoojoo
00:00
03:04
Performed by Stanley Kirkby
Author: Stanley Kirkby
00:00
02:19
Performed by Harlan and Stanley
Author: Harlan and Stanley
00:00
02:25
The Stanley Brothers live at the WNER Suwanee River Jamboree in 1958 performing their song We Are Going To Paint The Town
Author: The Stanley Brothers
00:00
03:48
MIDI file of Bay View Gavotte 1893 by Australian composer William Stanley 1820-1902
Author: William Stanley (composer)
00:00
03:07
Performed by Stanley Krikby
Author: Stanley Krikby
00:00
03:03
Performed by Stanley Kirkby
Author: Stanley Kirkby
00:00
16:33
Eating dinner with stanley john.
Author: Wjoojoo
00:00
02:54
Performed by Stanley Kirkby
Author: Stanley Kirkby
00:00
00:01
Sea waves recorded on the seawall at stanley park, vancouver.
Author: Mobius Play
00:00
00:32
Alarm message recorded at the stanley a. Milner library in edmonton, alberta.
Author: Sit Walk
00:00
02:04
In the shade of the palm from Leslie Stuart and Owen Hall's Florodora. Sung by Frank C. Stanley in 1902. This is Edison Gold Moulded Record #8066. Other titles for this song include: In the shade of the sheltering palm Shade of palms There is a garden fair Florodora was the first big hit musical of the 20th century. "Tell me pretty maiden" was the runaway hit, with "In the shade of the sheltering palm" also quite popular.
Author: Owen Hall (real name, James Davis, 1853-1907) and Leslie Stuart (1863–1928)
00:00
01:05
Tapping on various parts of an old brass fire extinguisher with the handle end of a stanley knife; then unscrewing the top, removing it, putting it back on and screwing it again. Recorded indoors onto minidisc with ecm-ds70p condenser mic at c. 1m range, unprocessed, some background noise.
Author: Cubic
00:00
03:29
Recorded 8 dec 2013 with tascam dr-100mkii, using only built-in stereo unidirectional mics. Distance from icicles approx 2 meters. Icicles occasionally break off concave cliff face in the sun; cliff reflects sound from behind recorder of people walking by on stanley park seawall, bicyclists, snippets of conversation. Light breeze riffles the ocean behind (mostly unheard). 3:26 with fade-in and fade-out.
Author: Mjscox
00:00
02:03
Tell me pretty maiden from Leslie Stuart and Owen Hall's Florodora (1899 in London; 1900 on Broadway). Sung by the "Edison Sextette" (Ada Jones, George S. Lenox, Corinne Morgan, Grace Nelson, Bob Roberts and Frank C. Stanley) for Edison Records. It Edison Gold Moulded Record #8260. Florodora was the first big hit musical of the 20th century. "Tell me pretty maiden" was the runaway hit. "Tell me pretty maiden" is a double sextet, sung by six girls, matched in looks, all 5'4" inches tall and 130lbs, and their six suitors. This recording cuts their number in half, since, although it is difficult to get six people in front of a recording horn, it is even more difficult to get twelve.[1] This recording consists of only the first verse. A vocal score is available at The International Music Score Library Project.
Author: Owen Hall (real name, James Davis, 1853-1907) and Leslie Stuart (1863–1928)
00:00
02:22
Frank C. Stanley's 1910 Indestructible Record performance of "Auld Lang Syne". This is Indestructible Record #1267. "Auld Lang Syne", ein Lied, das traditionell zum Jahreswechsel gesungen wird, in einer Aufnahme aus dem Jahr 1910 Македонски: Шкотската новогодишна песна Auld Lang Syne („Многу одамна“) во изведба на Френк Стенли (1910).
Author: Lyricist: Robert Burns (1759–1796) Singer: Frank C. Stanley (1868–1910)
00:00
01:19
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).
Author: Untitled
00:00
01:16
When Johnny Comes Marching Home performed by the Brass Quartet of the United States Navy Band. Members of the quartet include Chief Musician Stanley Curtis on trumpet, Musician 1st Class Philip Eberly on euphonium, Musician 1st Class Anthony Halloin on tuba and Chief Musician John Schroeder on trumpet. Originally an early 19th century Irish tune that became popular during during the civil war, Patrick Gilmore wrote lyrics for it and published it as "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" in 1863. The version you hear performed by the Navy Band Brass Quartet was arranged by Schroeder. Download sheet music at https://www.navyband.navy.mil/Sheet%20Music/When%20Johnny%20Comes%20Marching%20Home%20-%20Brass%20Quartet%20(Navy%20Band).pdf.
Author: Composition: Patrick Gilmore Arrangement: Chief Musician John Schroeder Performance: United States Navy Band Brass Quartet Recording: United States Navy
00:00
02:56
O Canada English Weir 1928 Amicus No.: 31400413 Performer Heading: Johnson, Edward, 1878-1959 Performer: Edward Johnson, Tenor with Orchestra assisted by Male Quartet Title: O Canada [sound recording] / Weir, lyrics ; Lavallée, music Composer Heading: Weir, Robert Stanley, 1856-1926; Lavallée, Calixa Generic Label: Victor Transcribed Label: Victor Numbers: Issue no.: 24005 Matrix no.: [BVE45612] Take no.: 3 Side no.: B Notes: Distributor: RCA Victor Company Limited., Montreal Manufacturer: RCA Victor Company Limited, Québec (Province) Recorded: [7 Jun 1928], New York, Victor Talking Machine Co Released: [ca Sep 1928] Issue Type: primary label Comments: Text transcribed from label/Texte transcrit de l'étiquette: Licensed under Canadian patent no 160997 for sale at current catalog price by authorized dealers. No other person shall sell, expose or offer this record for sale or exchange; Not licensed for Radio Broadcast. Additional information/information additionnelle: BVE preceding the matrix no. indicates a 10" electric recording. Discographical reference: The Tenor of his Time : Edward Johnson of the Met, matrix, number, recording date Physical Description: 1 sound disc : 78 rpm, monaural ; 10 inch Genre: Songs ; National songs--Canada; Chansons nationales--Canada Location: 78/10 16010 Web source: http://amicus.collectionscanada.ca/gramophone-bin/Main/ItemDisplay?l=0&l_ef_l=-1&v=1&lvl=1&coll=24&itm=31400413
Author: Weir, Robert Stanley, 1856-1926
1 - 31 of 31
/ 1