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Bootyman Nothing You Can Do (Club Mix) FINAL.mp3
zippyshare.com ext: .mp3 11 MB date: 2012-05-07
Source title: bootyman - nothing you can do (club mix) - frequency
Bootyman Nothing You Can Do (Club Mix) FINAL
http://www.frequency.com/video/bootyman-nothing-you-can-do-club-mix/45655578
Auto Pilot Off Nothing Frequency.mp3
4shared.com ext: .mp3 2 MB date: 2010-04-03
Auto Pilot Off Nothing Frequency
http://search.4shared.com/network/search.jsp?sortType=3&sortOrder=1&sortmode=2&searchName=auto+pilot+off&searchmode=2&sizeCriteria=atleast
Video results for:nothing frequency mp3
Audible notes from the subcontra (16-32 Hz) and... This is a debatable subject but I want to point (More) This is a debatable subject but I want to point out that something is definitely audible from sounds emitted below the audible threshold for the human ear (approx. 20 Hz ~ F0, subcontra F). One hears the beats/pulses per second of the fundamental. If our ears were tuned to these frequencys I guess we would hear it in a different way. As it is, below 20 Hz the sound gets stripped of the sinusoidal tone timbre and sounds more like pulses.
This is a low-fi video with mp3 and wma formats. The sound would be better if only wav were used but not so much better according to my ears. The biggest improvement comes with good low frequency speakers. But since the sound has been cut off during recording and then during playback nothing matches a real life experience. I have listened to the subcontra C from an organ and it sounds like a huge drill, similar to the sound in this video but with a fuller resonance. So go out there and enjoy low frequency sounds in-situ! It could be in a church, or at a construction plant or inside an engine room to a huge ferry!
Thanks to symphonyboy for many of the clips!
1.We start with the contra C (C1, 32 Hz), the lowest C on the piano. First done by a synthesized contrabass oboe from the software Musebook tuner - Then a synthesized piano - a true organ contra C (Sydney Town Hall organ!), full clip at the end of the video, fantastic! a contrabassoon C1 executed by Susan Negro from a contrabass trombone (from the Elvis Aloha 1973 concert!) from a contrabass tuba executed by Roger Bobo (notice the similarity to the trombone in the timbre) from Encounters II, it is not Bobo in the picture though! and hear is how a subcontrabass tuba looks and sounds like!, from a Gerard Hoffnung concert recording, it is tuned one octave below the contrabass tuba but I have no super low note clips the famous contra C from the beginning of Richard Strauss´Also sprach Zarathustra, organ, contrabassoon and double bass. Lastly the C1 executed by male voices! JD Sumner from song You´ll never walk alone and Tim Storms from a live version of Amazing grace, actually Tim starts on Bb0 but ends on the C1.
2.Subcontraoctave notes: The last A (A0) on the piano done by a synthesized contrabass oboe from the software Musebook tuner and - then by a Bösendorfer 290 Grand Piano, the one with the subcontra black keys - An Ab0 from a Tubax (mix of a tuba and a saxophone) Youtube singer 5Hz (aka Doublebassmint) scaring small children with an Ab0 (from watch?v=o5XZOhYH1-M) Gospel bass Paul Kennamer also with an Ab0 A synthesized G0 with 4 harmonics from software Cooledit pro and - one with no harmonics (much harder to hear!) a G0 from a Bösendorfer 290 Grand Piano Youtube singer 5 Hz singing Walk that lonesome road down to F0!
3.Subcontra C (C0, 16 Hz): first by a Bösendorfer 290 Grand Piano (complete video at watch?v=JnfcMJwiOHQ) - the Sydney Town Hall organ an octobass (a triple-bass tuned one octave below the standard double bass!) C0 courtesy of Nicola Moneta another octobass C0 from a violin concerto by Adam Gilberti a standard double bass sliding from B0 to a barely audible C0 at the end of the clip, also by Adam Gilberti the famous subcontra C for contrabass tuba from William Kraft´s Encounters II done by Roger Bobo a synthesized C0 with 4 harmonics from software Cooledit pro and - one with no harmonics (much harder to hear!) - Youtube singer 5 Hz with a passage around C0 Paul Kennamer with a slide from C0 to C1, notice here how a C0 sounds stripped while the C1 sounds like a normal sinusoidal tone. It took a while until I actually heard the slide, it´s more of an acceleration in pulses per second.
4.Hypercontra octave notes: a hypercontra F and E flat by the Sydney Town Hall organ. Notice the drillness in sound.
5.Hypercontra C (C-1, 8 Hz): Sydney Town Hall organ full clip where the organ starts at C1 and slides down in C major to C-1, awesome is the word! a synthesized C-1 with 4 harmonics from software Cooledit pro and - one with no harmonics (very hard to hear!) Youtube singer 5 Hz with a passage around C-1
6.Hyperhypercontra C (C-2, 4 Hz): a crazy organ experiment with a C-2 (at watch?v=qEVd2vdWYc0) - a synthesized C-2 with 4 harmonics from software Cooledit pro and - one with no harmonics (very very hard to hear!) Youtube singer 5 Hz with a slide down from Eb2 to C-2 and then back up to G1! The slide and it´s harmonics are very evident in a frequency analysis.
7.Big bang C (57 octaves below middle C) which emits a pulse every 10th million years! Can you hear it? (Less)
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