An illustration with music of Humpty Dumpty from : Walter Crane, Mother Goose's Nursery Rhymes, A Collection of Alphabets, Rhymes, Tales, and Jingles (London, 1877), p. 42.
Amen break by the winstons [specifically g. C. Coleman] (at 1:26): (https://www. Youtube. Com/watch?v=gxzuq57_bym). I used audio source separator isse,(http://isse. Sourceforge. Net/), to separate the individual snare hits from the ride hits as well as the kicks,. I recorded the amen break samples to be separated with this amen break vst because it has good room reverb on it:. (https://www. Kvraudio. Com/product/db-force-the-amen-by-mastrcode-music). You can put this audio file in a splicer to make custom drum beats.
Cool for any project but. . . Can't remember the sound but the way it was processed was easy. . . Higher pitch, bit of eco delay, tiny reveerb, and the basic equalization.
This is a recording i ade of my drum kit back in 2014 after receiving a new snare drum. Note that the head that came on the snare has since been replaced, so a new recording may be in order at some point.
I put water on the frame drum and hit it several times to get a flat, rattly bass sound. Use my sound so you don't have to abuse your own drums. Recorded on an old ev pl-5.
Sound of opening drawer. Update 2018:you do not need my permission to use this sound anywhere. It is 100% royalty free! however it is nice to see where it is used so add a comment. Thank you and have a nice day!.
Part of sample pack "hip+hop_vinyl" some years ago i sampled some of my vinyl records using my mpc2000. . . Sampled drum kit consists hip hop, electronic and rock records. . . . Enjoy!.
Islamic sufis singing song with frame drum for zikr. Songs is a naat. Its written for sheikh nazim and sheikh ahmed yasin". It recorded at bursa halilurrahman dergah in turkey. Songer sufi is recep. .
Joyful and Triumphant performed by the Singing Sergeants of the United States Air Force Band. Track 13 from A Merry Little Christmas (2017).
作者: Composition: Floyd Werle, John Bliss; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Singing Sergeants and Concert Band; Recording: United States Air Force
This is a full acoustic drumkit sampled at multiple velocities with drum sticks and brushes, it was recorded in a small jazz bar at a local music school, i recorded this a long time ago with a zoom h1 portable recorder. It would still need some sorting and tweaking to build a soundfont or hydrogen drumkit which i want to do in the future but it will probably not be anytime soon.
Recorded on my iphone for a project, me hitting a shelf with trinkets on it that makes a loud thud and a rattle. Good for body impacts on furniture. Hard hit, good body and nice light rattle after.
This recording is for people who hate the highlighted high frequencies. An old sabian aax small recorded with a røde m5 mic. I the created two copies of the original recording:1. On the first file i applied low pass at 2 khz and hard compression at -24 db without makeup gain. 2. On the second file i applied high pass at 2 khz and hard compression at -24 db without makeup gain. Then i lowered -2 db all the spectrum except for the band from 3. 5 khz to 9. 1 khz and i applied hard compression at -24 db without makeup gain. I merged the two files. The envelope was very flat due to the compression and thus i reshaped it on wavelab (process > level envelope. . . Or press the "v" keyboard button; draw a natural fade out in steps [non-linear]). The result is a warm crash for people who don't want them loud.
Clothes hanger used as a drum. Wave, 44. 1khz, 16bit, stereorecording device: zoom h4n with xy-capsulelow-cut: yes (80hz)normalized to -1dbfslocation: campus volgershall leuphana university old building in the entrance area. Lat: 53. 25016472286296lon: 10. 382777452468872date: 2013-12-09, 16:30h. Recorded and edited by: claudio vater. This recording was created in the framework of the seminar "soundscape leuphana (ws13/14)".
Created for a scene in which someone is browsing the selections on a rack at a clothing store -- the sound of clothes hangers sliding across a metal rod. First slow, then medium, then fast.