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Ever since I heard Pink Floyd's processed recording of a stadium singing (on ''Fearless", from 1971's "Meddle"), the sound of a mega-crowd organism fascinates me as well as the mass hysteria behind it frightens me.
In fact, I really HATE football, but the 2010 World Championship brought a new fascinating phenomena: the Vuvuzela.
The deafening sound (over 125dB, which is louder than a chain-saw) is dreaded by many for its annoying sound and danger of deafening.Still, a stadium with thousands of these horns honking continuously is a fascinating sound, which I would love to hear properly recorded (in full surround, preferrably).
So, when someone posted a link to a short sample from the US-UK match, I simply could not resist....
I used the brilliant freeware Paulstretch program to create various stretched versions of this sample: with/without harmonics, filtered, with added low frequencies, stretched into various lenghts - and then used fragments of the results to compile this mix.
It's nothing special, and it was created in about an hour or so.Still, I very much like the drone sound and the overtones heard in it.
I can understand why many want to ban the Vuvuzela. And I do hate it when someone blows this loud thing somewhere near me unexpectedly.
But the sound of thousands of Vuvuzela's turning into a continuous drone is extremely fascinating to me..I could listen to it for a long time - if only I could find a way to filter out the annoying football commentators :-)
PvC- Vuvuzela Stretch Mix
Vuvuzela Stretch MixDOWNLOAD: 15 Mb (10 min.)(Right-click and Save As)
By Peter van Cooten for Ambientblog.net4.3
33 ratings
Ever since I heard Pink Floyd's processed recording of a stadium singing (on ''Fearless", from 1971's "Meddle"), the sound of a mega-crowd organism fascinates me as well as the mass hysteria behind it frightens me.
In fact, I really HATE football, but the 2010 World Championship brought a new fascinating phenomena: the Vuvuzela.
The deafening sound (over 125dB, which is louder than a chain-saw) is dreaded by many for its annoying sound and danger of deafening.Still, a stadium with thousands of these horns honking continuously is a fascinating sound, which I would love to hear properly recorded (in full surround, preferrably).
So, when someone posted a link to a short sample from the US-UK match, I simply could not resist....
I used the brilliant freeware Paulstretch program to create various stretched versions of this sample: with/without harmonics, filtered, with added low frequencies, stretched into various lenghts - and then used fragments of the results to compile this mix.
It's nothing special, and it was created in about an hour or so.Still, I very much like the drone sound and the overtones heard in it.
I can understand why many want to ban the Vuvuzela. And I do hate it when someone blows this loud thing somewhere near me unexpectedly.
But the sound of thousands of Vuvuzela's turning into a continuous drone is extremely fascinating to me..I could listen to it for a long time - if only I could find a way to filter out the annoying football commentators :-)
PvC- Vuvuzela Stretch Mix
Vuvuzela Stretch MixDOWNLOAD: 15 Mb (10 min.)(Right-click and Save As)

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