Quantised bells from rings, arbhar and morphagene processed and granulated. Morphagene oven-ready, markers set. 48khz 32-bit fp let it ring out. Enjoy. . .
Tuning fork 440 hz recorder using hp omen laptop's native microphone - stereo recording with one of the channels having bigger magnitude, was put to mono using audacity.
Light cosmic noise with some clicks and cracks. Sound of a radio tuned to a dead channel. Recorded with oktava-102 microphone and behringer ub1202 mixer.
Playing random tunes but reversed them to make it sound like nice suspense, sounds processed with synthesia and virtaulmidisynth, recorded in audacity.
De-tuned electric guitar noise played through a heavy metal pedal and a small practice amp , recorded with a cheap condenser mic and fussed with a bit.
This is the sound of a tuning fork (a little less than 440hz), which i recorded using a guitar pickup. I used this sound for coursera course "audio processing for music applications".
I was so impressed with 326553__shadydave__the-sonata-piano-loop (https://freesound. Org/people/shadydave/sounds/424283/) that i thought i'd do some vaiations on it.
It's a short recording of a small string orchestra tuning before rehearsal. You can hear the strings tuning and someone humming along. Recorded with a zoom h2.
A major chord + minor 7th with following samples (listed in order):an equal tempered arpeggiothe matching equal tempered chordan arpeggio with just intonationthe matching chord with just intontation.
This is a strange tune that very old handheld lcd video games played when they crashed. Probably is just something like a "play tune" command with a wrong memory address.
Dybby am chord made on modular synth. The 3 voice oscillator mfb osc-03 is tuned to an am chord (saw tooth wave) (tuned by ear. . . ). The sound is going to an uoki-toki polivoks filter in band pass mode and to a vca. From vca to zoom ms-70cdr tape echo effect and back to modular and into the ladik r-330 reverb. From reverb to mixer and out module to computer and audacity. And to you :-).