Track from 1995 done in cybersynth, an early piece of mac software i used for composing multimedia audio. Time for me to give back to this wonderful resource.
A simple phrase "when my work is finished, than i'm coming back for you!" in a dark undead-ish voice. Recorded with a cheap desktop mic and fiddled with in audacity.
Recording of cicadas in my back yard, featuring birds chirping, distant traffic, the occassional fly passing by, and a faint industrial air conditioner.
Recorded this at my girlfriend's house in the back where the frogs always congregate in spring. I used a yamaha pocketrak. Please comment on what you will use it for. Thanks. :^).
The sound of wading through shallow water, picking your feet out and putting them back in. Maybe on a beach or in wetland. Recorded with the h4n zoom and a directional microphone.
This is the sound of a city street as heard from a playground. There is a bit of construction going on to your right. You can hear the machines working and backing up.
A recording of me leaving my backdoor, walking across my backyard, sitting for awhile, then returning back to the house. Recorded on a zoom h2n recorder. No editing.
A recording of me leaving my backdoor, walking across my backyard, sitting for awhile, then returning back to the house. Recorded on a zoom h2n recorder. No editing.
This is the squeek my distortion unit makes if you unplug it while it is on, then plug it back in. The unit is a behringer hm300, which takes a 9v dc connection.
Sveriges Radios folkmusikinspelningar. Låtar från Uppland. Dokumentatör: Lars Madsén (Q5971467) Radiotjänsts ursprungliga produktionsnummer: 42/4895:1:5
Walking on snow, boots, at around -12 degrees celsius. At first on hard snow on the road, then turning onto soft snow, then back onto the hard one again.
Recording of cicadas in my back yard, featuring birds chirping, distant traffic, the occassional fly passing by, and a faint industrial air conditioner.
A low whirring sound with a squeaky loop on top, at the back of a university restaurant. No idea what produces that. Recorded on the fly with a crappy mic, but usable with a little cleanup.