What is the best "sound" you've ever heard?
-
- Posts: 211
- Joined: Thu Jul 20, 2006 4:03 pm
- Contact:
Although the whole tune numbs me every time, there's one particular noise in Boards of Canada's Telephasic Workshop that makes me shiver. Not sure why really, it's just one of those sublimely perfect bits of production. I won't be able to reproduce it textually in any accurate sense, but nevertheless I'll try: Amidst all the cut up vocal snippets, its the one that sounds like a woman going "a-a-A-oh-a", and it happens merely twice.
Similarly, the snare in Underworlds' Pearls Girl, used sparingly and to preempt and emphasise the the end of the bar. I love offset jazzy snares.
Gecko's make a cool noise, too
Similarly, the snare in Underworlds' Pearls Girl, used sparingly and to preempt and emphasise the the end of the bar. I love offset jazzy snares.
Gecko's make a cool noise, too
free tunes for all! http://www.thereverseengineer.co.uk
A sort of stretchy noise made really loud by Schneider TM live at King Tuts in Glasgow - it made me laugh uncontrollably.
The weird hard to define sounds on Systemisch by Oval.
The last note of Goldberg Variations by JS Bach played by Glenn Gould (1982 version).
Blackbird singing +1
Woman's orgasm +1
Wine glugging out of a bottle.
A waterfall.
I once climbed The Five Sisters of Kintail (it's a mountain ridge you filthy monkeys). It was a perfect sunny day and I could see for about 40 miles. I could not feel even a breath of wind. But I could hear a funny papery sound, tiny and very delicate. I saw three butterflies fluttering around each other. It took me a while to realise, and another while to believe, that what I could hear was the sound of their wings. At 3000 feet above sea level in the Scottish highlands.
Yay. Cool thread.
The weird hard to define sounds on Systemisch by Oval.
The last note of Goldberg Variations by JS Bach played by Glenn Gould (1982 version).
Blackbird singing +1
Woman's orgasm +1
Wine glugging out of a bottle.
A waterfall.
I once climbed The Five Sisters of Kintail (it's a mountain ridge you filthy monkeys). It was a perfect sunny day and I could see for about 40 miles. I could not feel even a breath of wind. But I could hear a funny papery sound, tiny and very delicate. I saw three butterflies fluttering around each other. It took me a while to realise, and another while to believe, that what I could hear was the sound of their wings. At 3000 feet above sea level in the Scottish highlands.
Yay. Cool thread.
MacBook Pro Retina, Live 9.5, Reason, UC33, KRK RP5s, Teenage Engineering OP1, Korg ESX2, Korg Prophecy, Clavia Nord Lead, Bass, Guitars.
http://soundcloud.com/motorradkinophone
http://soundcloud.com/motorradkinophone
I would have to say, in any slow tune, country or not, that has a pedal steel flowing over the top. The sound of angels I tell ya!
-Kenny D
-Kenny D
http://www.BeatHive.com - A marketplace for musicians to buy and sell loops.
Re: Rush 2112
One of the stupidest things I've ever done... bought Rush 30th Anniversary concert tickets for London in 2005, and forgot to go...Cyberdude wrote:Favorite sound? The overture of 2112 in it's entirety.
FYI, latest RUSH CD Snakes and Arrows to be released May 1 with a summer tour schedule soon to be announced.
I won't make the same mistake again (assuming there's a European tour).
-
- Posts: 828
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2004 2:37 pm
- Location: kyoto, japan
- Contact:
-
- Posts: 261
- Joined: Fri Feb 17, 2006 2:59 pm
1. Rueben Gonzalez's piano on the Introducing... album.
2. Ben Webster's breathy sax.
3. That slow bit in Panama when Eddie hits that perfect tone. Albatross / Peter Green ditto.
4. My dog barking in his sleep.
5. Born Slippy.
6. The bird outside my house which sings a different melody every five seconds in the spring. Honestly, I've listened for over and hour and the song changes every ten second and never repeats. I should record it and post online.
7. Virus Ti. When it is working properly.
8. A cello.
9. Nimrod from Elgar's Enigma Variations.
10. Anyone with a really infectious laugh.
11. Anything in French.
12. I once stood right beside a Jaguar in Singapore zoo (on the other side of the bars) and it let out the most blood curdling roar I have ever heard. Primeval chills ran down my spine. Awe inspiring.
2. Ben Webster's breathy sax.
3. That slow bit in Panama when Eddie hits that perfect tone. Albatross / Peter Green ditto.
4. My dog barking in his sleep.
5. Born Slippy.
6. The bird outside my house which sings a different melody every five seconds in the spring. Honestly, I've listened for over and hour and the song changes every ten second and never repeats. I should record it and post online.
7. Virus Ti. When it is working properly.
8. A cello.
9. Nimrod from Elgar's Enigma Variations.
10. Anyone with a really infectious laugh.
11. Anything in French.
12. I once stood right beside a Jaguar in Singapore zoo (on the other side of the bars) and it let out the most blood curdling roar I have ever heard. Primeval chills ran down my spine. Awe inspiring.
I invented coffee
-the horn part just before Oreste's entrance in Richard Strauss's Elektra
my heart melted and spewed out my ears the first time i heard that.
-on that note, the string writing in Wagner's overture to Die Fliegende Holländer. sounds just like wind and waves crashing against the hull of a giant ship.
my heart melted and spewed out my ears the first time i heard that.
-on that note, the string writing in Wagner's overture to Die Fliegende Holländer. sounds just like wind and waves crashing against the hull of a giant ship.
..... . . . . . . . . .
The synth/pad line from Radiohead's "Idioteque", which was sampled from a 1970's experimental piece called "Mild und Leise", by Paul Lansky, forming the four chord progression repeated throughout the song. That sound was created using punch card computers and days or weeks of processing just to get a few seconds of synthesized sound. Awesome.
Also, any synth sound made by boards of canada
Contrabass.
Also, any synth sound made by boards of canada
Contrabass.
\,, / (^_^) \,,? /
-
- Posts: 1768
- Joined: Thu Apr 07, 2005 9:30 pm
i'm a big fan of the wierd morphy bass sound in tipper's outsideinsideout.
i just can't get enough of that shit.
i just can't get enough of that shit.
ill gates aka the phat conductor
producer, performer + ableton/music teacher
http://www.illgates.com
producer, performer + ableton/music teacher
http://www.illgates.com
1. telekom - Systemisch by Oval, mmm especially the first track, and most of the others. i was listening to it today on the bus on the way home from work, its a great soundtrack for slow moving traffic going through a city
2. seaside sounds..... seagulls, waves, amusement arcades, kids playing, the wind, the sound of people on holiday, stuff like that
3. when you have a pan with a bit of water in and you tap the side of the pan and move the water from side to side.
4. some really fast songs by melt banana
5. a needle when it gets stuck in a really scratchy record and keeps going on and on and on
6. really fizzy mineral water close up to your ear
7. the shipping forecast about 5am
8. catpurrs
9. church bells in little towns striking the hour
2. seaside sounds..... seagulls, waves, amusement arcades, kids playing, the wind, the sound of people on holiday, stuff like that
3. when you have a pan with a bit of water in and you tap the side of the pan and move the water from side to side.
4. some really fast songs by melt banana
5. a needle when it gets stuck in a really scratchy record and keeps going on and on and on
6. really fizzy mineral water close up to your ear
7. the shipping forecast about 5am
8. catpurrs
9. church bells in little towns striking the hour