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Output from an Analog Box 2 circuit I built that is rather simple in its approach to almost everything. This is a follow-up to ElvenRecoveryBot3_Output_A, which I realized too late actually sounds overly compressed, despite not really having any compression happening in the circuit. So this version is a bit more balanced. The rest here is from the description of the earlier one, mostly.
It almost sounds like some people singing to very simple accompanying bass and, well, something like a plucked string instrument, I don't know exactly what. It isn't trying to sound like anything in particular, but still sounds kind of interesting. The worst part is that it gets kind of boring when the chord root doesn't change for multiple bars (it's controlled by low frequency oscillators and some randomness). Anyway, I posted an earlier version of this on the ABox2 group mailing list (google groups) in May, 2021. But this one's output was post-processed in Cool Edit Pro just to spruce it up. Unfortunately, this clip is kind of long and is not a seamless loop (but it is not a rude at the ends as the previous output from this circuit). I am uploading this in FLAC format, 44.1K, 16bit. While it is musical in nature, the point of this is not to post a work of music, which isn't really allowed on freesound anyway -- it is to demonstrate how a relatively simple ABox2 circuit can make interesting sounds, using just some oscillators, filters, counters, logic operations, math operations, and delays (etc.). In some respects, it is somewhat similar to the "ChoirBot" output sounds I have previously posted, but those are from a much more sophisticated circuit that has much more variation, dynamics, instrument modeling, and so forth. By contrast, this circuit is simpler. Nevertheless, if it strikes your fancy, musically, I suppose you can certainly use it as some sort of background music for ... something.
Type
Flac (.flac)
Duration
5:09.980
File size
20.6 MB
Sample rate
44100.0 Hz
Bit depth
16 bit
Channels
Stereo
1 year, 7 months ago
See also https://freesound.org/people/Timbre/sounds/640939, where Timbre took a section and processed it -- very nice.