18 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Syllable"

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Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Author: Batchku
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Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Author: Batchku
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Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Author: Batchku
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Male choir singing short sanskrit syllable om. Sung through a roland vp 7 vocoder, recorded and edited with cubase se and wavelab.
Author: Livepiano
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Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Author: Batchku
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00:01
Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Author: Batchku
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00:01
Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Author: Batchku
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00:01
Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Author: Batchku
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The phrase "that unmistakeable stereophonic sound" with some of the syllables separately enunciated.
Author: Cognito Perceptu
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Laffik's bebop. Processed a bit. Generic mic and equalization - taming 500hz and adjusting slope upwards.
Author: Laffik
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Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Author: Batchku
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Vocal syllables, created by recording somewhat rhythmic nonesense talk with an sm-58, followed by automated segmentation of the audio. Slices are numbered from 001-0xx (with slices that were too short taken out), l means long and s means short.
Author: Batchku
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Repeated syllable of processed vocal.
Author: Gnuoctathorpe
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Just a silly voice. . . Uttering the syllable "squee".
Author: Johnlavine
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Made this by using the e3 mono stretch mode with fl studio on a stock vocal sample in fl studio.
Author: Renard V
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Unedite, recorded in a bus with a group of vietnamese female voices talking all at the same time, sounds like arguing. Normal vietnamese speech is in high pitch, loud with short one syllable words. With some editing could be used as a group of aliens speaking around you.
Author: Timsippala
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00:59
This is a transformation of the original recording https://freesound. Org/people/pinehadmz/sounds/369501/. For week 10 "musical piece" assignment for the audio signal processing for music applications online class. There are three layers, panned in stereo. Each syllable of each layer was randomly pitch shifted to a note in the minor scale using the harmonic plus stochastic model. Each harmonic track was thickened with extra harmonics during the synthesis process too to make it extra weird.
Author: Pinehadmz
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Got a group of about 8 people to say "hey!" a few times. Layered all the takes, compressed, and added a touch of reverb. I've used this one a bunch in my own songs. Sometimes, to achieve a convincing gang vocal effect, when i don't have a gang, you can sing your line a few times, and then layer this "hey" under each syllable, and you can get a pseudo-gang vocal. Works in a pinch if your mix is dense enough. I'd love if you'd credit joshua scott or rjc studios if you use this sample, but don't sweat it if you don't. Good artists borrow, great artists steal.
Author: Letztergeist
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