Massive Buzz
Posted: September 15th, 2009 | Author: Nathan | Filed under: field recording, sound designToday, no photo. No description. Just a sound.
This sound is a field recording of a bee captured in a plastic food bin. It was recorded by placing a contact microphone on the side of the bin, which was tracked at 24 bit/192kHz onto my Sound Devices 702 recorder. The bee was hitting the sides of the bin with his body and wings, producing the warbling and percussive hits. I lowered the pitch of the sound by a full three octaves while keeping the duration the same, which still kept a fair amount of dynamics given the high sample and bit rate of the recording. This is dying to be used in conjunction with an actively-automated Doppler plug-in, but a gent has only so many spare cycles in a day.
No bees were harmed in this recording. The little feller had air holes and he was released after 6 minutes, after which he promptly went back to pollinating my backyard.
Tags: audio equipment, bee, buzz, buzzing, extreme sound processing, field recording, insect, pitch shifting, sound design, sound effects | No Comments »