Very Low Frequency reproduction of natural phenomenon. Samples included
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we_R_DNA |
I am curious does anyone know how to reproduce the ELF and or VLF waves from lightning bolts or other auroral phenomenon.
For under water Low frequency sounds I have
http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/sound01/background/seasounds/seasounds.html#Anchor-1515
That is an excellent source
now for Auroral I have:
http://spaceweather.com/glossary/inspire.html
Check out both; they both have samples. |
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pozz |
additive synthesis mebbe. next time theres a storm, just pay attention to the sound from start to finish - youll get an idea of how to emulate it.
listen to Bernard Parmegiani's De Natura Sonorum and La Creation du Monde. there's one track in Natura Sonorum where he creates the sound of thunder using hundreds of lil blips.
done 30+ years ago btw |
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MrJiveBoJingles |
You would need special speakers to play the real sounds, which go way below 20 Hz. As it says on the NOAA page, the versions they have are pitched up a lot to make them playable on normal equipment. You would not even be able to "hear" the real sounds anyway, they would just shake the room and probably make you feel a bit anxious.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infras...s_to_infrasound |
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palm |
malstroem synth in Reason has a thunder waveform :p
its great. that and rain |
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