Wameta tig 1600 started. Recorded in 24-bit 96khz with a tascam dr-40 and a sony ecm-nv1. For details on sow: blacksmith ed1 sound pack see: www. Oree. Storijapan. Net/praxis/sound-of-work.
A sound of a referee blowing his whistle. This can be played on sport games like football, basketball, tennis or ping pong. Of course, this sound should be loud. I hope you enjoyed that sound.
A riding experience. A train leaves one station and reaches another. The original wav file sounds thick and heavy, i mean, sounds good, but the size becomes big as well. The outline of the sound is well described at mp3, too.
A 90s trance / chillout vowel pad. Several layers recorded from various vst synths stacked, resanpled and seasoned in the sampler. No hardware involved and all materials are neither vintage nor rare ;-).
A skinny balloon being pumped up using a small pump (similar to a bicycle pump). The sound is wheezy, squeaky, and there are some mechanical clicking components due to the mechanism of the pump. Recorder: olympus digital voice recorder. Microphone: sony ecm-ms907.
Recreating the pitch shift used by pink floyd in echos. Inspired by taking the now retro echophonto its extreme flange edge and tweaking. . . Rendered in reaper with markers at 48 khz 32 bit fp for the beloved morphagene fans out there. Go back in time and enjoy!.
Rattle snake hissing or shaking its tail at variable pitches. Recorded with the tascam dr-40 built-in microphones, processed in pro tools 10, bounced to a 48khz 24bit wav file.
This is a very short excerpt of carnatic music. This sound is basically used for a demonstration of the importance of loudness and timbre in melody. A synthesized melody sound and a monotonized version of that sound will be soon linked here in the description.
This is simply a synth playing a c note with the pitch automated. Typically used in modern electronic music to signify a build and create an euphoric feeling.
This was a fierce match between pengosekan and pedang tegal. The audience was the liveliest i've seen and heard. Recorded with zoom h2n on august 16th, 2012.