not music, but amazing nightingale song
- KVRAF
- 40229 posts since 11 Aug, 2008 from clown world
Took me ages to find this video again.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ac2iCPb5Yn4
Using Audio to MIDI and Iris 2 to Create Music By Birds
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ac2iCPb5Yn4
Using Audio to MIDI and Iris 2 to Create Music By Birds
Anyone who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.
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- KVRAF
- 3980 posts since 20 Feb, 2004
Thanks again dedindi! I'll give you credit at https://musictales.club/ if I end up using this sample in a composition.
Otherwise, what are our usage rights? Just want to make sure everyone's rights are respected.
Otherwise, what are our usage rights? Just want to make sure everyone's rights are respected.
A well-behaved signature.
- KVRer
- Topic Starter
- 29 posts since 1 Jun, 2019
the thread title can be changed since I'm going to post other nature records.
how do you like "hi-fi nature sounds"?
not only Messiaen but many composers imitate birds, here is Beethoven's cadenza for woodwinds based on the motifs of nightingale, quail, and cuckoo:
there is an opinion that his "fate motif" is inspired by the yellowhammer song.
- KVRer
- Topic Starter
- 29 posts since 1 Jun, 2019
we do not violate anyone’s rights to this record, as MusicTales will soon publish nature sounds links for registered users.
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- KVRAF
- 3619 posts since 25 Mar, 2006 from The city by the bay
Oh, you shouldn't take my post too seriously. A bird song thread by any other name would sound as sweet...dedindi wrote: ↑Sun Aug 04, 2019 5:49 amthe thread title can be changed since I'm going to post other nature records.
how do you like "hi-fi nature sounds"?
not only Messiaen but many composers imitate birds, here is Beethoven's cadenza for woodwinds based on the motifs of nightingale, quail, and cuckoo:
there is an opinion that his "fate motif" is inspired by the yellowhammer song.
- KVRAF
- 1534 posts since 20 May, 2002 from Cambridge, UK
I love the nightingale song, thanks very much for sharing.
I hear song thrushes quite a lot around here at sunset. They sit on the highest point of a house or a tree and sing until it gets dark
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=97juxKjceoI
I hear song thrushes quite a lot around here at sunset. They sit on the highest point of a house or a tree and sing until it gets dark
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=97juxKjceoI
THIS IS MY MUSIC: http://spoti.fi/45P2xls
- KVRer
- Topic Starter
- 29 posts since 1 Jun, 2019
thrushes are very funny birds!
they compile their repertoire by imitating the songs of other birds.
at sunset, the thrush flies around my woods performing a new set.
he kind of sings his song to all those whom he imitates.
but most of all he likes to sing on top of a dead tree.
I think the reason is a good reverb due to lack of leaves.
- KVRer
- Topic Starter
- 29 posts since 1 Jun, 2019
hi there =)
continuing the tread wanna share another soundscape
it is the crickets choir recorded on an august night
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NQVMUl80d04
here are the downloads of these nature sounds in wave 24/48, flac, and mp3
it is free for listening and sound production
https://musictales.club/tags/nature-sounds
serg
continuing the tread wanna share another soundscape
it is the crickets choir recorded on an august night
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NQVMUl80d04
here are the downloads of these nature sounds in wave 24/48, flac, and mp3
it is free for listening and sound production
https://musictales.club/tags/nature-sounds
serg
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- KVRian
- 594 posts since 14 Apr, 2019
The kvr osc this month has to contain synthesized birdsong. In participating I notice the majority of sounds start high and pitch down very quickly. Too quickly to really say they're playing any one particular note. My nephew is attempting to make a birdlike noise without pitch modulation so that it can be more incorporated into actual human type music. I'm skeptical that he can manage it.
And so when someone is transcribing bird song into notes...not sure what that's about. Are you focusing on the initial pitch, the ending pitch or some average? The range is usually pretty large.
Dogs on the otherhand start low and quickly modulate up in pitch when barking. (Made a good dog sound by accident while trying to make birds.)
And so when someone is transcribing bird song into notes...not sure what that's about. Are you focusing on the initial pitch, the ending pitch or some average? The range is usually pretty large.
Dogs on the otherhand start low and quickly modulate up in pitch when barking. (Made a good dog sound by accident while trying to make birds.)
- KVRer
- Topic Starter
- 29 posts since 1 Jun, 2019
i think the intervals that birds perform are much more important than the pitch
they really perform the correct musical intervals and if you want to imitate their singing you need to focus on which intervals perform the bird
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- KVRer
- 8 posts since 25 Apr, 2020
Here was a field recording I did in Miyagi prefecture of Japan a few years ago, walking carefully through a forest near an onsen (hot spring). Free lossless version available from Soundcloud also.
https://soundcloud.com/modlift/crickets ... g-in-japan
https://soundcloud.com/modlift/crickets ... g-in-japan
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- KVRer
- 10 posts since 28 Apr, 2020
Nice. May We use it in commercial production as well ?
- KVRer
- Topic Starter
- 29 posts since 1 Jun, 2019
sure
please, credit MusicTales.club if used
just now recorded the bees buzz on a flowering shrub
will post it soon