174 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Trio"

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08:04
Joshua Bell, Awadagin Pratt, and Alisa Weilerstein Perform Felix Mendelssohn's Piano Trio No. 1 in D minor, Op. 49 – 4. Finale: Allegro assai appassionato, at the White House Evening of Classical Music on November 4, 2009.
Author: Felix Mendelssohn
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00:14
The Bobby Fuller Five are a London-based power trio. Surfing: it's all they want to do.
Author: the bobby fuller five
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00:31
Amateurish and tipsy trio of pirates perfom "drunken sailor". Musical atmosphere for pirate ships, pirate bars. . .
Author: Breviceps
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02:36
Português: "Samba de fato", samba composto por Pixinguinha e Cícero de Almeida. Interpretação de Patrício Teixeira e Trio T.B.T. gravada em 1932.
Author: Pixinguinha e Cícero de Almeida
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02:46
1915 McKee Trio recording of the Carrie Jacobs-Bond song "A Perfect Day"
Author: Carrie Jacobs-Bond (1862–1946)
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00:52
Three people eating a breakfast of crepes. Eating and cutting with forks on plates. A bit of low talking at the end.
Author: Mefrancis
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05:11
Place of recording: London (United Kingdom) Performer(s): London Philharmonic Orchestra Conductor: Serge Koussevitzky (1874-1951) Vocal range: instrumental Title/Work: Symphony No. 3 in E-flat major, Op. 55 Content: 3rd Movement - Scherzo (Allegro Vivace) and Trio Genre(s): Symphonic
Author: Untitled
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01:54
The trio from Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1, directed by Edward Elgar. Played for the opening of EMI's studios at Abbey Road.
Author: Edward Elgar (1857–1934)
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03:56
La Tipica - Polka by Carlo (or Carlos) Curti, originally published in 1895; performed by Trio Romano [i.e., Cibelli's Neapolitan Orchestra], Victor Records, New Jersey
Author: Carlo (or Carlos) Curti
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01:33
National Emblem performed by the United States Navy Band's Ceremonial Band. Featured on the 1990s album Music For Honors and Ceremonies.
Author: Untitled
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03:10
Elegy of Mikhail Glinka. Performers Riga Radio Trio: Aleksandrs Arnītis — Violin; Atis Teihmanis — Chelo; Oļģerts Kreišmanis — piano.
Author: Untitled
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07:44
This file has no description, and may be lacking other information. Please provide a meaningful description of this file.
Author: Felix Mendelssohn
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00:11
Excellent if lo-fi recording of three voices, two male and one female singing and building one note at a time a major chord triad, saying, "hello," thrice. I use it as a ring tone. Recorded with an ipod and griffin italk mic.
Author: Fauxpress
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Three female goats recorded via my samsung phone and extracted the audio and to my best cleaned it up with audition and normalized through audacity. They are from little gate farm in east sussex a care farm. Tried running it through melodyne and think they are bleating in c4 g.
Author: Beagle
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08:27
Hello World! is a piece of contemporary classical music for clarinet-violin-piano trio composed by Iamus Computer in September 2011. It is arguably the first full-scale work entirely composed by a computer without any human intervention and automatically written in a fully-fledged score using conventional musical notation.
Author: Iamus (computer system)
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00:15
Rolling a trio of dice. 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
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00:36
Shaking a trio of dice. 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
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00:34
I recorded these spring peepers in upstate ny on march 18, 2022 in a wetland area. Spring peepers are small tree frogs. They are rarely seen, but during mating season in the spring, they are often heard. They are generally about one inch (2. 5 centimeters) in length, or about the length of a paper clip, and their weight averages from 0. 11 to 0. 18 ounces (3 to 5 grams). Spring peepers are known for the males’ mating call—a high-pitched whistling or peeping sound repeated about 20 times a minute. However, the faster and louder they sing, the greater the chances of attracting a mate. They often congregate near water and sing in trios, with the deepest-voiced frog starting the call. They begin breeding early in the spring and call on warm spring nights and during the day in rainy or cloudy weather. Females lay their eggs in vernal pools, ponds, and other wetlands where fish are not present. A female may lay anywhere from 750 to 1,200 eggs, which attach to submerged aquatic vegetation. Males fertilize the eggs as they are laid. Depending on the temperature, eggs can hatch within two days to two weeks. The tadpoles have gills to breathe underwater and tails to help them swim. Tadpoles transform into frogs over the course of 6 to 12 weeks. Spring peepers are said to have short lives, living three to four years at most.
Author: Fran Freesound
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