1,504 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Set"

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01:52
Hark! The Herald Angels Sing is an English Christmas carol which first appears in its modern form in 1850. The original lyrics are adapted from Charles Wesley's 1739 hymn ""Hark! how all the welkin rings", set it to the same tune as Christ the Lord is Risen Today. George Whitefield altered the opening lyrics to the more familiar "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing", and various others also made small alterations in the following years. In the early 1840s, Felix Mendelssohn wrote "Festgesang", a cantata in celebration of the presumed 400 year anniversary of Johannes Gutenberg's invention of the printing press. The tune to the second part of this piece, "Vaterland, in deinen Gauen", was adapted to fit the revised Wesley lyrics in 1855 by William H. Cummings, assembling the hymn tune into its more-or-less final form. It is performed by the chorus of U.S. Army Band "Pershing's Own", led by Colonel Thomas Rotondi, Jr. (Leader & Commander) and CSM Debra L. McGarity (Command Sergeant Major) c. 2010.
Author: Untitled
00:00
02:40
Created by divkid for use in the make noise soundhack morphagene. There are dry-only, fx-only, and mix versions of this reel in the pack. See it in action at https://youtu. Be/rk4ufmfcouc. Patch walkthrough. The patch starts with the qu-bit chance providing discrete random values (sample and hold) going into an instruo harmonaig. This takes the stepped random voltages and quantizing them to a given scale. I put in the notes c d eb f g ab bb which is a c natural minor scale, the relative minor of eb major (for anyone that's curious). However like most of my modular work i didn't actually tune the oscillators to anything specific. So treat the scale as a pattern of intervals not a set of specific notes. The quantized notes then form 4 voice chords giving us a root, third, fifth and seventh cv output that will be diatonic following the scale pattern, meaning the third will be major or minor, the seventh major, minor or dominant and the fifth natural or diminshed to suit the scale. With the 4 quantized outputs on the harmonaig these all go into the four oscillators on the synthesis technology e370 quad morphing vco. Each of the e370 oscillators are in the basic morph xy mode using the built in rom b set of wavetables. Wavetables are modulating by various mixes of the befaco rampage, mutable instruments tides, wmd multimode envelopes and music thing modular turing machine. The modulation sources are mixed and split with multiples and mixers. These modulating wavetables then go into a bubblesound vca4p where i'm using 4 mk1 intellijel dixie oscillators all un-synced and free running with sine wave lfos. Each lfo freely fades the voice in and out of the vca4p. As this is unsynced there's no regard to pitch changes linked to changes in amplitude and the swells. I find splitting the gate/rhythm from pitch regarding sequencing to be a freeing and interesting way to work that's not available on traditional instruments. This is just a simple application of that idea with the lfos fading freely unrelated to the other modulation or sequencing of pitch. The sound then goes from the vca4p mix out into a befaco mixer and praxis snake charmer which the output section of the larger case and i'm sending a 'pre' auxiliary out into my fx case. The dry sound first goes into the erica synths fusion delay / flanger vintage ensemble which is giving me short modulated delays giving vibrato like sounds and pushing the input level and overdrive gives us some warmth and grit that thickens up the sound and also fills in the gaps left by the free running lfos pulling quieter sounds and compressing in the on board tube. This then outputs to the feedback 1 bit multitap delay module which has it's delay chip pushed to longer times for some added crackle and noise. I'm using the two delay taps for a shorter and longer delay with little feedback to mix the dry sound for a generally noisier and smeared version of the input. This then goes into the xaoc devices kamieniec with it's on board lfo as slow as possibly for a mildly resonant phase shifting. This goes into mutable instruments clouds set to sew random grains slowly and randomly which are pitch shifted up 2 octaves to fill out some high end flourishes against the closed chord voicings at the core of the patch. Finally this goes into a long lush reverb from the halls of valhalla card in the tiptop audio z-dsp. The stereo fx chain and the mono dry signal are mixed in the befaco hexmix and recorded as a mixed stereo file. I'd consider this to be the main 'reel'. However i split the dry signal and the fx only wet stereo signal and recorded those at the same time so you can choose which reel to use and experiment with dry/wet or blended sounds from this patch.
Author: Makenoisemusic
00:00
03:26
The United States Air Force Band joined with percussionists from the Marine Band, Army Band, and Coast Guard Band perform a percussion rendition of the American patriotic classic, "When Johnny Comes Marching Home". Arranged by USAF Band composer and staff arranger, Master Sgt. John Bliss. Done in celebration of Veterans' Day. Credits: Colonel Don Schofield - Executive Producer Master Sgt. Adam Green - Producer Chief Master Sgt. Dennis Hoffmann, Master Sgt Jeremy Koch - Videographers Technical Sgt. Tim Hilgert - Video Editor Technical Sgt. Jim Woolf - Audio Engineer Musicians: Master Sgt. Adam Green, The United States Air Force Band “Chief’s Own” - marimba, vibraphone, xylophone, orchestral bells, field drum Sergeant 1st Class Sidonie McCray, The United States Army Band “Pershing’s Own” - vibraphone, xylophone, orchestral bells Master Sgt. Kenneth Wolin, “The President’s Own” United States Marine Band - xylophone, shekere, vibraphone, orchestral bells, field drum Staff Sgt. Michael Hopkins, “The President’s Own” United States Marine Band - orchestral bells, cowbell, vibraphone, xylophone Musician Petty Officer 1st Class Nathan Lassell, The United States Coast Guard Band - drum set, vibraphone, xylophone, orchestral bells
Author: Composition: Patrick Gilmore Arrangement: Master Sgt. John Bliss Performance: Percussionists from the the United States Air Force Band, the United States Marine Band, the United States Army Band, and the United States Coast Guard Band Recording: United States Air Force
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01:29
Shortwave wide-band digital emission recorded on july 15, 2014 at 15:17 utc in am mode using 2 instances of the online remote controllable short-wave receiver located at the amateur radio club etgd at the university of twente the netherlands. Left channel was recorded below the central frequency, at a frequency of 10187khz, right channel was recorded above the central frequency, at 10191khz. This was an experiment to see if selective fading would create stereo effects, as the lower frequency part of the transmission would be heard better in the left channel, and the higher frequency component would be heard better on the right. I used goldwave to put the separate recordings into 2 channels of the same file, after i synched the recordings by ear at 1/16 playback speed using a set of 2 particularly strong lightning static crashes as a guide, trimming off everything that came before the first strike in both original recordings, then inserting silence in the range of a few milliseconds until the stereo separation was as close to zero as i could get it. I wasn't as successful at that as i've been with experiments with voice recordings from simultaneous broadcasts on 2 wavelengths that i haven't posted here.
Author: Kbclx
00:00
12:28
As of this recording, i am the official town troubadour of manchester, ct, usa. I am just putting the finishing touches on an album collecting the various songs i have written for the town in this role. One of the songs mentions the church bells that ring out every day in at the top of the hill in town, so i thought it would be nice to open that song with a field recording of the bells. Every day at noon, center congregational church in manchester, ct, usa plays a full 10 minutes of music. This is a recording of the full 10 minutes as played on december 4th, 2022 - recorded with a zoom h1n, fades added in audacity. It was quite windy and despite my wind sock, there is the occasional audible gust. I was set away from direct traffic sound, but there is ambient traffic sound. There was also a church maintenance truck that slowly drove past me midway through the recording (probably curious at the strange person with the tripod recorder and headphones). I have not attempted to identify the songs in this recording. But if you recognize any, please let me know!.
Author: Fungussmunguss
00:00
01:34
This audio contains a guitar performance of lily was here song. It was recorded using a fender player telecaster guitar and yamaha audio gram 6 audio interface as recording set up. Tempo: 108. The setup to record this performance and the other ones in the same dataset (five guitar dataset) is explained here: the setup used a yamaha audio gram 6 audio interface and reaper 10 to record guitar from direct input (di), a huawei p30 lite model mar-lx1a to record guitar from a mobile and a dell inspiron 13 5000 to record guitar from a computer. To record acoustic guitar in di, i used a fishman neo d single coin on larrivée and seymour duncan seth love on the eastman connected to a nap-5 stageman floor acoustic preamp going then to the audio interface. The computer and mobile were positioned approximately 3. 8 cm from the player position (measured from the twelve fret of the guitars). The electric guitars were plugged into a dv mark little jazz guitar amp which has a di output, that was connected to the audio interface. The amp was located at a distance of 114. 5 cm from the mobile and the computer.
Author: Eduardverges
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00:16
6-Z19 hexachord.
Author: User:Hyacinth
00:00
11:01
Three sets of stacked third, one whole step apart, panned left right and center. Originally intended for meditation. Sounds a bit like early 80's horror film music.
Author: Gggtrew
00:00
00:13
Knocking a door 3 sets of 5 times.
Author: Billaras
00:00
02:18
Sets of bench and lat pulldown in the small room gym.
Author: Ciuas
00:00
00:10
7-36ZB heptachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
01:47
A recording of a manual typewriter. The author is inserting paper, typing a paragraph, and then removing the paper. Sound of paper being inserted into the typewriter using the paper platen winder. Then the sound of typing of about 50 words. A small bell sound is heard at the end of each line, then the sound of the platen being pushed back to start the next line, and the platen moving the paper up one line. The sample ends with the sound of the paper being wound through the typewriter and removed. I have tried to avoid clipping of each typed letter. There is a lot of percussive multi pitch sound in each typed letter. There is a mechanical escapement that provides a clicking sound as the platen is moved back for the next line. This sample was recorded direct to the hard drive of this samsung nc10 netbook using audacity set to 44. 1khz and 16 bit in mono. A dynamic microphone was used on a small desk stand about 1 foot (30cm) from the typewriter, the stand being on a different table to the one on which the typewriter was used. The microphone was a fairly cheap make (hitachi hmp606) and was pre-amplified using a maycom mictube preamplifier built into the xlr connector, connected to the mic in port of the samsung nc10 netbook. The mic boost was reduced to zero, and the gain of the maycom preamp was at its lowest setting.
Author: Keithpeter
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00:11
8-16A octachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:10
7-5A heptachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:11
10-6 decachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:08
4-5A tetrachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
5-7A pentachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
6-21A hexachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
5-36ZB pentachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:11
10-4 decachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:11
8-26 octachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
6-26Z hexachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:11
8-16B octachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:10
7-16A heptachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:12
9-7A nonachord on C.
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:10
7-38ZB heptachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
5-31B pentachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
6-30B hexachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
6-4ZA hexachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
5-27B pentachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:10
7-27B heptachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:10
7-13A heptachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:10
7-21B heptachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:11
8-9 octachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
5-16B pentachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
6-16A hexachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
6-18A hexachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
6-33A hexachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
5-26B pentachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
6-3ZA hexachord on C.
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:11
8-22B octachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:12
9-3B nonachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
6-15B hexachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:11
8-7 octachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:10
7-9A heptachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:10
7-16B heptachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:10
7-30B heptachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:11
8-29ZB octachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
00:00
00:09
5-11A pentachord on C
Author: Hyacinth
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