2,102 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Two"

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Performed by the United States Navy Band's Ceremonial Band. Featured on the 1990s album Music For Honors and Ceremonies.
Author: USN Band
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00:18
Period (two phrases) from Beethoven's Piano Sonata in C Minor, Op. 13 (Pathetique), second movement.
Author: Untitled
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03:21
Johnny Cash and the Tennessee Two during a performance at The Town Hall Party, performing the traditional folk song Frankie and Johnny
Author: Traditional
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00:14
Four hand piano reduction of the "Lacrimosa" from Mozart's Requiem, arranged by Carl Czerny. KV 626
Author: Untitled
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09:02
Daniel Auber's overture to the opera Fra Diavolo, played by the United States Marine Band for the album Overtures, Volume Two.
Author: Composition: Daniel Auber Performance: United States Marine Band
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00:09
*257th harmonic on C = ??. Just: 257:256 = 6.75 cents. Limit: 257-limit. MIDI pitch bend: 20,66
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
07:15
Antônio Carlos Gomes's overture to the opera Il Guarany, played by the United States Marine Band for the album Overtures, Volume Two.
Author: Composition: Antônio Carlos Gomes Performance: United States Marine Band
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00:09
C major and E minor contrast through their respective notes C and B (in red and orange), each a half step apart or leading tones. The chords share two notes (in blue) however.
Author: Hyacinth at en.wikipedia
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00:11
Mozambique primary bell pattern above a rumba clave. A two bell pattern played on the body and rim of a single mambo bell or high and low bongo or cha-cha bells.
Author: Created by Hyacinth (talk) using Sibelius 5.
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04:20
Francesco Tamagno, the creator of the role, sings "Niun mi tema" (Morte d'Otello) from Giuseppe Verdi's Otello. Sung in 1903, Tamagno would die just two years later.
Author: Giuseppe Verdi (1813–1901) Francesco Tamagno (1850–1905)
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04:51
Scott Joplin's "Leola (Two-Step)", published in 1905 and performed here by James Brigham in December 2015.
Author: Untitled
00:00
04:20
Francesco Tamagno, the creator of the role, sings "Niun mi tema" (Morte d'Otello) from Giuseppe Verdi's Otello. Sung in 1903, Tamagno would die just two years later.
Author: Giuseppe Verdi (1813–1901) Francesco Tamagno (1850–1905)
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00:09
Sum and difference tones of A220 and unison, just perfect fifth, and octave. Note that this is not produced through ring modulation of two notes, but is four separate notes.
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
08:40
Otto Nicolai's overture to the opera The Merry Wives of Windsor, played by the United States Marine Band for the album Overtures, Volume Two.
Author: Composition: Otto Nicolai Performance: United States Marine Band
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08:43
Ambroise Thomas's overture to the opera Raymond, ou Le secret de la reine, played by the United States Marine Band for the album Overtures, Volume Two.
Author: Composition: Ambroise Thomas Performance: United States Marine Band
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01:47
National anthem of Serbia (instrumental, two verses). Српски / srpski: Химна Републике Србије "Боже правде".
Author: Untitled
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01:44
National anthem of Serbia (instrumental, two verses). Српски / srpski: Химна Републике Србије "Боже правде".
Author: Untitled
00:00
05:52
Giuseppe Verdi's overture to the opera Luisa Miller, played by the United States Marine Band for the album Overtures, Volume Two.
Author: Composition: Giuseppe Verdi Performance: United States Marine Band
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06:22
Gaetano Donizetti's overture to the opera Don Pasquale, played by the United States Marine Band for the album Overtures, Volume Two.
Author: Composition: Gaetano Donizetti Performance: United States Marine Band
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06:60
Franz von Suppé's overture to the opera Leichte Kavallerie (Light Cavalry), played by the United States Marine Band for the album Overtures, Volume Two.
Author: Composition: Franz von Suppé Performance: United States Marine Band
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00:16
Regular diatonic tuning 53-tone. A regular diatonic tuning is five "whole tones", T, and two half tones, S, arranged in any rotation of TTSTTTS.
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:16
Regular diatonic tuning 31-tone. A regular diatonic tuning is five "whole tones", T, and two half tones, S, arranged in any rotation of TTSTTTS.
Author: Hyacinth
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00:12
Half time: notice the snare moves to beats 3 of measure one and two (beats 3 & 7) while the hi-hat plays only on the quarter notes. Note also, for example, that the quarter notes 'sound like' eighth notes in one giant measure.
Author: Created by Hyacinth using Sibelius 5.
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00:05
Musical notation to illustrate two leitmotifs of Prince Gvidon that appear in "Flight of the Bumblebee" from the opera The Tale of Tsar Saltan Made from notation prepared on computer by Mllefifi; screen capture in JPEG format. The composition itself is in the public domain; the musical excerpts are only minimally extracted and analyzed.
Author: Hyacinth
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00:06
Musical notation to illustrate two leitmotifs of Prince Gvidon that appear in "Flight of the Bumblebee" from the opera The Tale of Tsar Saltan Made from notation prepared on computer by Mllefifi; screen capture in JPEG format. The composition itself is in the public domain; the musical excerpts are only minimally extracted and analyzed.
Author: Hyacinth
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00:19
Istrian mode as subharmonics 14 through 7 on C: D-, E↓, F, G↓, A♭, B♭-, C, D-' = D, E, F, G♭, A♭, B♭, C, D'.
Author: Hyacinth
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02:45
From the source: "An AIFF recording of two lovely old guys playing the gamelan xylophone in Bali. Recorded last October with a PMD660 Marantz in 16 bit with internal mics. A little bit of air around it but a very beautiful little tune and perfect for background to something. Enjoy."
Author: thedialogueproject
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02:34
America the Beautiful performed by a brass quintet of the United States Navy Band. In the original video, the five performing musicians are dressed in full dress blues. Instrumentation: one French horn, two trumpets, one trombone, and one tuba.
Author: Composition: Samuel A. Ward Lyrics: Katharine Lee Bates Arrangement: Senior Chief Musician Scott Silbert Performance: United States Navy Band, brass quintet Recording: United States Navy
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*256 tone = 1 step in 768-tet on C. Equal-tempered: 21/(6*128):1 = 1.56 cents cents. MIDI pitch bend: 64,32 on m2 The 1023rd subharmonic is 1.69 cents, and Sibelius's pitch bend commands are not fine enough to distinguish between these two intervals, as is human perception.
Author: Hyacinth (talk) (Uploads)
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00:07
10 beats in 2/4 versus 5/4 and 15 beats in 3/4 versus 5/4. Multiples of two divide 2/4 evenly, and multiples of three divide 3/4 evenly (neither depiction requires ties), but neither divides 5/4 evenly (both depictions require ties). At, say, quarter note = 150 bpm and quarter note = 225 bpm, respectively, the first pair and the second pair are identical.
Author: Hyacinth
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00:20
24-tet scale on C (50 cent steps). Easley Blackwood, Jr.'s notation for 24 equal temperament. As only "ups" are used, there are no three-quarter flats and quarter flats are enharmonically spelled (Dd = C#↑). Pitches are split into two groups of 12. MIDI pitch bend is correct for intervals.
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
03:50
Public domain music from musopen.com Q: What restrictions are there for the music downloaded from this site, can I edit it? Share it? Use it for a film project? A: The music on this site is given a public domain license, therefore, there are technically no restrictions on what you do with it. We do ask, out of courtesy, two things. One, that you do not directly sell our recordings for profit, as a great amount of work has been donated to this project, and for the benefit of the public, not profit. Two, we ask that any commerical or derived works attribute Musopen somewhere, to give credit to this project. And for all the film students emailing, yes you may use it in your film, you can then sell the film, containing our music. It's in the public domain afterall. -- http://www.musopen.com/faq.html Musopen has requested in-line attribution in any article this file is used in.  
Author: (See Musopen for author information)
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01:58
Public domain music from musopen.com Q: What restrictions are there for the music downloaded from this site, can I edit it? Share it? Use it for a film project? A: The music on this site is given a public domain license, therefore, there are technically no restrictions on what you do with it. We do ask, out of courtesy, two things. One, that you do not directly sell our recordings for profit, as a great amount of work has been donated to this project, and for the benefit of the public, not profit. Two, we ask that any commerical or derived works attribute Musopen somewhere, to give credit to this project. And for all the film students emailing, yes you may use it in your film, you can then sell the film, containing our music. It's in the public domain afterall. -- http://www.musopen.com/faq.html Musopen has requested in-line attribution where this article is used in files.
Author: (See Musopen for author information)
00:00
07:07
Public domain music from musopen.com Q: What restrictions are there for the music downloaded from this site, can I edit it? Share it? Use it for a film project? A: The music on this site is given a public domain license, therefore, there are technically no restrictions on what you do with it. We do ask, out of courtesy, two things. One, that you do not directly sell our recordings for profit, as a great amount of work has been donated to this project, and for the benefit of the public, not profit. Two, we ask that any commerical or derived works attribute Musopen somewhere, to give credit to this project. And for all the film students emailing, yes you may use it in your film, you can then sell the film, containing our music. It's in the public domain afterall. -- http://www.musopen.com/faq.html Musopen has requested in-line attribution in any article this file is used in.  
Author: (See Musopen for author information)
00:00
02:27
Public domain music from musopen.com Q: What restrictions are there for the music downloaded from this site, can I edit it? Share it? Use it for a film project? A: The music on this site is given a public domain license, therefore, there are technically no restrictions on what you do with it. We do ask, out of courtesy, two things. One, that you do not directly sell our recordings for profit, as a great amount of work has been donated to this project, and for the benefit of the public, not profit. Two, we ask that any commerical or derived works attribute Musopen somewhere, to give credit to this project. And for all the film students emailing, yes you may use it in your film, you can then sell the film, containing our music. It's in the public domain afterall. -- http://www.musopen.com/faq.html Musopen has requested in-line attribution in any article this file is used in.  
Author: (See Musopen for author information)
00:00
20:49
The Gnostic Bible* (eds. Willis Barnstone and Marvin Meyer) From chapter "Early Wisdom Gospels", section "The Gospel of Thomas" "Yeshua said to them, When you make the two into one, and when you make the inner like the outer and the outer like the inner and the upper like the lower, and when you make male and female into a single one, so that the male will not be male nor the female be female, when you make eyes in place of an eye, a hand in place of a hand, a foot in place of a foot, an image in place of an image, then you will enter the kingdom." The Gospel of Thomas is a Coptic text with many different variations. This version (from the Gnostic Bible) is the most likely source for these two titles, based on what we know of BoH's interest in religion and how exactly the phrases match.
Author: Bull of Heaven
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00:02
Robotic voice effect using a en:vocoder. This effect is often found in film and television productions. For the technically minded, the voice is modulating a 110Hz en:sawtooth wave, which is the note A two octaves below en:A440. There is also some en:reverberation and phasing added. Note on playing this audio clip This audio clip is an en:Ogg Vorbis file. For a list of compatible media players, see the article at [1].
Author: Ianmacm at English Wikipedia
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00:26
Part 5 (two ruffles and flourishes and "General's March") of a basic outdoor parade sequence performed by the Ceremonial Band of the United States Air Force Band of the West. Track 15 from Facets! (1992). Captain Steven Grimo, Commander. Lieutenant Danny Varella, Vice Commander.
Author: Composition: traditional; Performance: United States Air Force Band of the West, Ceremonial Band; Recording: United States Air Force
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11:37
Public domain music from musopen.com Q: What restrictions are there for the music downloaded from this site, can I edit it? Share it? Use it for a film project? A: The music on this site is given a public domain license, therefore, there are technically no restrictions on what you do with it. We do ask, out of courtesy, two things. One, that you do not directly sell our recordings for profit, as a great amount of work has been donated to this project, and for the benefit of the public, not profit. Two, we ask that any commerical or derived works attribute Musopen somewhere, to give credit to this project. And for all the film students emailing, yes you may use it in your film, you can then sell the film, containing our music. It's in the public domain afterall. -- http://www.musopen.com/faq.html Musopen has requested in-line attribution in any article this file is used in.  
Author: (See Musopen for author information)
00:00
04:24
Public domain music from musopen.com Q: What restrictions are there for the music downloaded from this site, can I edit it? Share it? Use it for a film project? A: The music on this site is given a public domain license, therefore, there are technically no restrictions on what you do with it. We do ask, out of courtesy, two things. One, that you do not directly sell our recordings for profit, as a great amount of work has been donated to this project, and for the benefit of the public, not profit. Two, we ask that any commerical or derived works attribute Musopen somewhere, to give credit to this project. And for all the film students emailing, yes you may use it in your film, you can then sell the film, containing our music. It's in the public domain afterall. -- http://www.musopen.com/faq.html Musopen has requested in-line attribution in any article this file is used in.  
Author: composer Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750); performer credited as guitarist Gordon Rowland for Musopen (according to User:Graham87)
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05:29
Klavierstücke, op. 118 - ii. intermezzo, Public domain music from musopen.com Q: What restrictions are there for the music downloaded from this site, can I edit it? Share it? Use it for a film project? A: The music on this site is given a public domain license, therefore, there are technically no restrictions on what you do with it. We do ask, out of courtesy, two things. One, that you do not directly sell our recordings for profit, as a great amount of work has been donated to this project, and for the benefit of the public, not profit. Two, we ask that any commerical or derived works attribute Musopen somewhere, to give credit to this project. And for all the film students emailing, yes you may use it in your film, you can then sell the film, containing our music. It's in the public domain afterall. -- http://www.musopen.com/faq.html Musopen has requested in-line attribution in any article this file is used in.  
Author: Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) (see Musopen for performance author information)
00:00
02:09
Public domain music from musopen.com Q: What restrictions are there for the music downloaded from this site, can I edit it? Share it? Use it for a film project? A: The music on this site is given a public domain license, therefore, there are technically no restrictions on what you do with it. We do ask, out of courtesy, two things. One, that you do not directly sell our recordings for profit, as a great amount of work has been donated to this project, and for the benefit of the public, not profit. Two, we ask that any commerical or derived works attribute Musopen somewhere, to give credit to this project. And for all the film students emailing, yes you may use it in your film, you can then sell the film, containing our music. It's in the public domain afterall. -- http://www.musopen.com/faq.html Musopen has requested in-line attribution in any article this file is used in. Music: Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse
Author: Modest Mussorgsky (1839-1881) (see Musopen for performance author information)
00:00
06:17
Public domain music from musopen.com Q: What restrictions are there for the music downloaded from this site, can I edit it? Share it? Use it for a film project? A: The music on this site is given a public domain license, therefore, there are technically no restrictions on what you do with it. We do ask, out of courtesy, two things. One, that you do not directly sell our recordings for profit, as a great amount of work has been donated to this project, and for the benefit of the public, not profit. Two, we ask that any commerical or derived works attribute Musopen somewhere, to give credit to this project. And for all the film students emailing, yes you may use it in your film, you can then sell the film, containing our music. It's in the public domain afterall. -- http://www.musopen.com/faq.html Musopen has requested in-line attribution in any article this file is used in.  
Author: (See Musopen for author information)
00:00
03:26
Public domain music from musopen.com Q: What restrictions are there for the music downloaded from this site, can I edit it? Share it? Use it for a film project? A: The music on this site is given a public domain license, therefore, there are technically no restrictions on what you do with it. We do ask, out of courtesy, two things. One, that you do not directly sell our recordings for profit, as a great amount of work has been donated to this project, and for the benefit of the public, not profit. Two, we ask that any commerical or derived works attribute Musopen somewhere, to give credit to this project. And for all the film students emailing, yes you may use it in your film, you can then sell the film, containing our music. It's in the public domain afterall. -- http://www.musopen.com/faq.html Musopen has requested in-line attribution in any article this file is used in.
Author: Untitled
00:00
12:13
Public domain music from musopen.com Q: What restrictions are there for the music downloaded from this site, can I edit it? Share it? Use it for a film project? A: The music on this site is given a public domain license, therefore, there are technically no restrictions on what you do with it. We do ask, out of courtesy, two things. One, that you do not directly sell our recordings for profit, as a great amount of work has been donated to this project, and for the benefit of the public, not profit. Two, we ask that any commerical or derived works attribute Musopen somewhere, to give credit to this project. And for all the film students emailing, yes you may use it in your film, you can then sell the film, containing our music. It's in the public domain afterall. -- http://www.musopen.com/faq.html Musopen has requested in-line attribution in any article this file is used in.
Author: (See Musopen for author information)
00:00
05:16
Public domain music from musopen.com Q: What restrictions are there for the music downloaded from this site, can I edit it? Share it? Use it for a film project? A: The music on this site is given a public domain license, therefore, there are technically no restrictions on what you do with it. We do ask, out of courtesy, two things. One, that you do not directly sell our recordings for profit, as a great amount of work has been donated to this project, and for the benefit of the public, not profit. Two, we ask that any commerical or derived works attribute Musopen somewhere, to give credit to this project. And for all the film students emailing, yes you may use it in your film, you can then sell the film, containing our music. It's in the public domain afterall. -- http://www.musopen.com/faq.html Musopen has requested in-line attribution in any article this file is used in.  
Author: (See Musopen for author information)
00:00
10:25
Public domain music from musopen.com Q: What restrictions are there for the music downloaded from this site, can I edit it? Share it? Use it for a film project? A: The music on this site is given a public domain license, therefore, there are technically no restrictions on what you do with it. We do ask, out of courtesy, two things. One, that you do not directly sell our recordings for profit, as a great amount of work has been donated to this project, and for the benefit of the public, not profit. Two, we ask that any commerical or derived works attribute Musopen somewhere, to give credit to this project. And for all the film students emailing, yes you may use it in your film, you can then sell the film, containing our music. It's in the public domain afterall. -- http://www.musopen.com/faq.html Musopen has requested in-line attribution in any article this file is used in.
Author: Untitled
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