Ian dury used something like this in "what a waste". . . It's the gurgling noise made when the last of the water runs down a bathroom sink plughole. Conveys almost as much meaning as a cistern flushing, but in a shorter time (smaller file size). As ever (with my stuff) no "noises off" and so ready for mixing!.
3 recordings of various rfis made by refreshing the radio signal on myphone and putting it close to my microphone. First sound however, was coming from my electric piano, because my phone was on top of it.
Sound/track made withhttps://freesound. Org/people/gis_sweden/sounds/465325/noise and some simple tones added. Reverb and delay (zoom ms-70cdr)!nlc sloth is controlling filters and melody development.
This is just a noise taken off my home phone, it is the standard noise that plays after punching in a number. I used a direct feed for this one, although there really was not much different. This is the only sound from a direct feed that wouldn't come in so terribly soft.
An ambient sound, best experienced ina quiet environment, as the sound isbest enjoyed at a moderate volume level. Completely manufactured or created withaudacity with a basic noise file. There are very slight nuances ordiscrepancies with the sound; it it nota perfect monotone track, given theinitial sample is not a tone but a whitenoise sample.
Scrolling through various shortwave frequencies, caught couple tones among the noise. Sounded like sad horns. Radio used was a grundig yacht boy 207 with a broken antenna, recorded on a tascam dr-05x.
Door handle in my kitchen looped four times. Recorded with a tascam dr-05x. Noise reduction applied with a dose of vintage warmer. Is it warmer? i don't know.
A fire engine approaching, then slowly passing, then disappearing into the distance. This was in gallery place in washington, dc, during rush hour, so traffic was slow; thus, a longer than usual siren.
Low rumble using interface noise neural dsp gojira, acustica coffepun and heavy filtering. I also added a high-passed filtered mid-side version for the stereo image.
I was walking along a busy street in a city, cars and trams passing by, then i entered a tram, rode one stop and exited the tram again. Zoom h1, 48/16.
Ringing of a small metal bell. Recorded using a blue yeti microphone at 16-bit 44100hz in audacity. Used audacity's noise removal filter to to remove background noise. For this file, i isolated the samples i liked and left a small gap of silence between them for separation later. Attribution appreciated but not required.
4ch-surround field recording of the interior of a car during heavy rain. Very neutral with no other contaminating noises, so it's ideal as a backdrop. . . Recorded with a zoom h2n. These are the rear channels of a 4ch surround recording. Mics set to 120° dispersion.
Recorded in kanawha state forest in west virginia on a dr70r with shotgun mic. Brought down creek noise with rx8 de-noise but still a little running water in the background. Free use.
Wind noises recorded under a window in a high city block. Apart from huge amount of mic internal noise the recording is nice. Could be useful only when played really quiet. Captured with zoom h2 with hi gain at 96khz/24-bit. Edited and normalized with audacity.
Krell patch based on make noise shared system with a few added embellishments, combining old (echophon and erbe-verb) with mimeophon and x-pan tech. Morphagene oven-ready. Rendered in reaper @48khz 32 bit fp. Enjoy the loop!.
I combined an ambient bar crowd recording that i found here with a funky little back beat that i also found on this site and made a great cubicle noise blocker / filter. I use this at work with headphones on when i'm trying to concentrate and drown out conversations in the office. Also good for when i work from home and i'm trying to drown out the tv and other distractions. The crowd noise is excellent at diffusing regular office conversation and the little funky back beat keeps the crowd noise from getting boring. This works really well even at fairly low volume i. E. You dont have to crank it loud to drown out the distractions. Hope you like it and thanks to everyone for the great sounds on this site. Combination of the following two files - yet another bar crowd - june 2007. Wav (lonemonk)hip hop. Wav(ls)ps - i purposely let the crowd noise run out for a few seconds at the end so that you can appreciate the full groove of the hip hop. Wav. Has a nice effect when you loop the whole thing, gives you a little break from the crowd noise. Almost like you're stepping out of the room for a second.