Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Music Sounds Description License Zapsplat: Yes Yes Sound effects library offering over 116,000 free sound effects and music. CC0 YourFreeSounds: Yes Yes Independent, unique sound library with royalty free & free sound effects - for video, sound design, music productions and more. CC0, CC BY Gfx Sounds: Yes Yes
If you have trouble playing ogg files, see Wikipedia:Media help (Ogg). If you would like to help expand and improve this list, and integrate it with other Wikipedia articles, please visit the free music taskforce. Smartphones like the iPhone can store and play music listed here, using various free apps such as Capriccio.
The rims of wine glasses filled with water are rubbed by the player's fingers to create the notes. The Cristal Baschet. A crystallophone is a musical instrument that produces sound from glass. One of the best known crystallophones is the glass harmonica, a set of rotating glass bowls which produce eerie, clear tones when rubbed with a wet finger.
The Shape of Water (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack album to the Academy Award-winning film of the same name.It featured 26 tracks — most of the tracks were from the original score composed and conducted by Alexandre Desplat and some tracks are incorporated songs, being originated from the 1940s and 1960s as the film is set during the Cold War period.
Musician Thomas Bloch playing the waterphone, 19 September 2009 at the Mittersheim pond, France. A waterphone (also ocean harp) is a type of inharmonic acoustic tuned idiophone consisting of a stainless steel resonator bowl or pan with a cylindrical neck and bronze rods of different lengths and diameters around the rim of the bowl.
song is "Huron Carol"; "Une Jeune Pucelle" A young musician plays the hydraulophone by pressing on jets of water laid out to a musical scale.Waterflute (reedless) hydraulophone with 45 finger-embouchure holes, allowing an intricate but polyphonic embouchure-like control by inserting one finger into each of several of the instrument's 45 mouths at once
A glass harp being played. The rims of wine glasses filled with water are rubbed by the player's fingers to create the notes.. A glass harp (also called musical glasses, singing glasses, angelic organ, verrillon or ghost fiddle) is a musical instrument made of upright wine glasses.
The instrument has the potential range of at least one octave, and can easily be tuned to any chromatic pitch, so it is possible to perform complex melodies with it. Typical struck bottles sound from about C7 to C8. Of course, music can be transposed into this range as needed.