29 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Uncle"

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00:05
I recorded a family member doing a victim impersonation on new years day. It has a "wilhelm scream" quality to it.
Author: Skytheguy
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00:07
open channel d, "channel d open". This is suppossed to be the sound of napoleon solo's pen communicator in the man from uncle, the tv spy series of the 1960's (i was a big fan as a teenager). I put this as the ringtone for members of my family whose phone calls i cannot ignore. It was created using the ringtone generator on a nokia 3620 mobile phone.
Author: Ozzie
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02:59
Performed by 'Uncle Bunt' Stephens.
Author: 'Uncle Bunt' Stephens
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00:09
Me saying. . "you mess this up. . Ill introduce you to uncle stanley" in an east end london accent.
Author: Aarongbuk
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04:35
Written by Pablo De Sarasate Op. 43 (1844-1908). Performed by Mischa Violin (Violin), Josef Adler (piano).
Author: Mischa Violin (Violin) Josef Adler
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00:15
sad flounder by Uncle Milk
Author: Uncle Milk
00:00
00:14
apex chappelle by Uncle Milk
Author: Uncle Milk
00:00
00:15
sr8 m8 by Uncle Milk
Author: Uncle Milk
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00:15
1 snow day (short) by Uncle Milk
Author: Uncle Milk
00:00
00:12
on two hours sleep by Uncle Milk
Author: Uncle Milk
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00:10
is it a rash by Uncle Milk
Author: Uncle Milk
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00:16
zate it with a spork by Uncle Milk
Author: Uncle Milk
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00:46
The traditional country song Billy In The Low Ground, pefomed by "Uncle" John Patterson
Author: Traditional
00:00
03:39
Amazing Grace, sung by the Sacred Harp Singing Society, directed by "Uncle Bill" Hardeman and recorded by Alan and John Lomax. Recorded at the Sacred Harp Singing Convention in Birmingham, Alabama.
Author: Sacred Harp Singing Society, Birmingham, Alabama
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03:16
The Glory of the Yankee Navy performed by the USMC Band. March, “The Glory of the Yankee Navy" (1909) - The musical comedy The Yankee Girl was in need of a spirited march, so Sousa was prevailed upon to provide one. The march, one of Sousa’s most interesting musically, was dedicated to the star of the show, Blanche Ring. Lyrics were provided by Kenneth S. Clark. The title underwent a process of evolution. The earliest known manuscript was labeled “Uncle Sam’s Navy.” Prior to the opening, newspapers referred to the march as “The Honor of the Yankee Navy.”
Author: Untitled
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02:32
Performed by Peerless Quartet
Author: Peerless Quartet
00:00
01:35
Performed by Elizabeth Cronin.
Author: Elizabeth Cronin
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00:02
Audio of my uncle jim saying "hey, you can't do that!".
Author: Techwalker
00:00
05:58
A mother explaining her kid why she is upset with his uncle.
Author: Raliuga
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00:14
My uncle and my dad's friend were being drunkies i guess on independence day and they wanted to race their trucks down the street. It's a ford ranger 4 cylinder.
Author: Vacuumfan
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01:16
A cluttered track i made because i was bored (like most of the stuff i made. ) i dont know what you would use this for but use it if you want.
Author: Dragonboi
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00:05
Talking about a Bi Polar Man. Police scanner clicks and electric pops. Great for scanner or scanning sound effects. Could even be from military radio.
Author: ScanMan
00:00
01:17
My great-uncle and great-aunt have an old grandfather clock. It doesn't quite work right and only chimes 7 times at 12 o'clock, so i had to record it at 11 and add another chime. Nonetheless, it makes for a great ambient sound, especially in a horror setting. I recorded it with my tablet (samsung galaxy tab a) and edited it with audacity (added in an extra chime, converted it to stereo, etc. ).
Author: Fission
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02:08
A sample of church bells from a pamplona side street. Recorded in 1985 on a sony walkman using the in-built mics. Recorded onto tdk d90 cassette and stored since then in damp cellars, sheds, and long forgotten drawers. Just today transferred to digital using my fathers old decca legato tape player which we purchased in the early 70s to enable us to send messages to my uncle who had emigrated to australia. Dad says the player cost over £30 then which was more than a weeks wages at the time. I was inter-railing around europe at the time but the recording seems to stop in pamplona. Six weeks later all my money and passport was stolen while in crete and i made my way home via the british consulate in athens.
Author: Plantmonkey
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01:17
Sample of a busker playing the accordion in a pamplona side-street in 1985. Recorded with a sony walkman using the in-built mics. Some background talking. Recorded onto tdk d90 cassette and stored since then in damp cellars, sheds, and long forgotten drawers. Just today transferred to digital using my fathers old decca legato tape player which we purchased in the early 70s to enable us to send messages to my uncle who had emigrated to australia. Dad says the player cost over £30 then which was more than a weeks wages at the time. I was inter-railing around europe at the time but the recording seems to stop in pamplona. Six weeks later all my money and passport was stolen while in crete and i made my way home via the british consulate in athens.
Author: Plantmonkey
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00:50
In front of my desk in my room is a wood paneled wall with a cubbie. It's about a foot wide, 10 inches from top to bottom and maybe 7 inches deep. I'm just guessing. Around this cubbie is a border of wood. In the bottom right corner under the border i have jammed one end of an elastic string that used to have glitter on it. It's from a christmas box of chocolates my uncle sent me last year. I stand in front of this cubbie whose bottom is at chin height, (i'm only 5ft1in) so my arms are above my head as i pull this string across the cubbie up and to the left to the border on the top which acts as my only fret. The string is a few inches longer than the cubbie is wide, but when i pull it it gets longer so my hand is 3/4 along it's length as i pull back and forth across the border to tighten and loosen the string. No matter how hard i pull it never pops loose from it's mooring. This time the mic is sitting in the cubby so i get a much clearer and louder sound. When i stretch the string across the top it has a fairly long sustain, so i can play 4 notes on a single pluck.
Author: Kbclx
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03:25
In front of my desk in my room is a wood paneled wall with a cubbie. It's about a foot wide, 10 inches from top to bottom and maybe 7 inches deep. I'm just guessing. Around this cubbie is a border of wood. In the bottom right corner under the border i have jammed one end of an elastic string that used to have glitter on it. It's from a christmas box of chocolates my uncle sent me last year. I stand in front of this cubbie whose bottom is at chin height, (i'm only 5ft1in) so my arms are above my head as i pull this string across the cubbie to the border on the left which acts as my only fret. The string is a few inches longer than the cubbie is wide, but when i pull it it gets longer so my hand is 3/4 along it's length as i pull back and forth across the border to tighten and loosen the string. No matter how hard i pull it never pops loose from it's mooring. The recording starts with me standing up from my chair. In the first part until 01:54 i am playing the string at maybe 30° from horizontal. It has a buzzy quality that reminds me of an african folk instrument i can't remember the name of. From 01:33 to 01:54 i'm trying to imitate a korean folk vibrato kind of thing. In the second part until 02:29 i am playing 45 to 60° from horizontal and it sounds like a full-bodied string bass with no buzz. In the last part beginning at 02:34 i am playing about 75° from horizontal across the top border of the cubbie on the left so it sounds buzzy and african again, and i'm just going crazy goofing around with a crazy bluesy rock sort of rhythm. There didn't seem to be any homemade 1-stringed wall-cubbie basses on this site so here is mine, have fun. I don't play it if mom is home because the living room is on the other side of the wall and she can't hear tv. Also my neighbor can probably hear it in the next apartment lol. Recorded with microsoft lifecam 3000.
Author: Kbclx
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