Halloween Sound Effects Vol. 1 DJ Drops 24 7 DJ Sound Effects Scary Effects
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The producers made extensive use of sound effects in the recording; the sound of a coffin opening was imitated by a rusty nail being pulled out of a board. The sound of a cauldron bubbling was simulated by water being bubbled through a straw, and the chains rattling were simply chains being dropped on a tile floor.[6]
Anime & Manga The school bell used in high-school anime: always the Westminster Chimes, and oddly enough, almost always played using the Tubular Bell patch on a Yamaha FM synthesizer. Since these are used a lot by real-life schools, this can be considered be a case of Truth in Television. A lot of the mecha shows like Super Dimension Fortress Macross, Armored Trooper VOTOMS, and even ones as late as After War Gundam X re-use the same sound effects from Fizz Sound Creation for scramble alarms, the mecha moving, shooting, and doing what they do. Whenever breasts are involved in any kind of motion, the same electronic \"boing\" sound effect is used. Many, many anime shows feature the same discordant electronic bell sound for railway crossings, likely because it is used by real railways throughout Japan and thus very recognizable. Some notable examples are The Girl Who Leapt Through Time, Haruhi Suzumiya, Sweet Blue Flowers and Serial Experiments Lain, but almost any show featuring Japanese (and sometimes even non-Japanese) trains could be mentioned.
Western Animation In My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic's Season 4 finale, Tirek's Mana Drain sound is the Alien Queen's shriek from Aliens. In \"Secret of My Excess\", Spikezilla appropriately has a Godzilla roar. The hydra from \"Feeling Pinkie Keen\" has Sharptooth's roars once more. The dragons usually utter the roars hear at the beginning of this video. The Ursa Minor in \"Boast Busters\" uses the King Kong roar. The roar made by Zod in Challenge Of The Gobots, which is literally a guy saying \"Muuuuuuuoooooaaaaahhhhhrrrrrrr!\", has also been used for the Sphinx in Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers, various monsters and sometimes Godzilla himself in The Godzilla Power Hour, and a lot of Hanna-Barbera cartoons. There are stock roars and other animal and monster sounds EVERYWHERE in Primal; contrary to how that might sound written out like that, it works to the series' benefit and really sells how savage and unforgiving the world it presents is. In contrast to Jurassic Park, which uses its own unique (though now-stock) sounds to better portray the dinosaurs less as monsters and more as animals doing what they do, the more vicious roars of Primal go very well with the violence and gore that's given center-stage as caveman Spear and tyrannosaur Fang fight to survive in these brutal lands against equally brutal creatures and monsters. Particularly, the infected sauropod in \"Plague of Madness\" uses the same roar as Kraid from Metroid multiple times; this roar itself originally comes from The Land Unknown and this and other sound effects from it are particularly prominent in Primal.
Western Animation The bear sound made famous by The Bear from Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law can also be heard in the El Tigre: The Adventures of Manny Rivera episode \"Oso Solo Mio\". Also in World of Warcraft for every single bear in the game. Mel Blanc's animal sound effects have been used other media such as his monster growls most notably used for Gossamer the red hairy monster, his bird screeches, as well as Dino's scream from The Flintstones. If animal sounds are heard in any cartoon made in the last 30 years, chances are Frank Welker or Dee Bradley Baker provided them. The standard \"horse whinny\" is heard when Twilight is trying to drag Fluttershy out of her house during \"Luna Eclipsed\". Justified; this is an episode of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, so the whinny is likely Fluttershy herself as she's being forced out of her hiding place. The Ursa Minor's roar in \"Boast Busters\". In \"Griffon the Brush Off\", Gilda can be heard uttering a generic red-tailed hawk's scream as she flies away at the end of the episode. There are two distinct frightened chicken clucks used in various cartoons, one of which was originated by Mel Blanc. An example of the first one is in Mulan when Mushu burns off Shanyu's falcon's feathers, the other is commonly heard in Disney cartoons after a feather has been plucked, an example is from the My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic episode Luna Eclipsed after Twilight asks Pinkie Pie if she's a little old to be trick or treating while she's wearing a chicken costume. For reference, it's the one that goes, \"BU-KAAAAAAWWWWW!!!!!!\"
Western Animation Parodied/Lampshaded in SpongeBob SquarePants. In an attempt to appease SpongeBob, Plankton offers him a brand new Spatula. Rather than playing the stock 'shiny' sound effects, he literally says the words \"Ching! Sparkle, sparkle\" as it shines. The bullhorn of failure (uuuuuuuh uaaaaah) in The Ren & Stimpy Show. And of course, DUN-DUN-DUUUUUUUUUUN! The \"Yabbity Yabbity\" sound originating in the early 1930's Looney Tunes short \"You Don't Know What You're Doin'!\" was used many times in later shorts and other cartoons throughout the years, the sound usually occurs after a characters hits his head and shakes it to regain consciousness or if a character is preparing to charge into something. The sound was made by blowing a certain tune on a trombone and speeding up the sound. The sound whenever a character in a Hanna-Barbera cartoon is preparing to run away (usually with a Wheel o' Feet) is bongo drums played very fast (although Hanna-Barbera's official name of the sound is the \"temple block riot,\" despite sounding nothing like temple blocks). It is sometimes used in other cartoons one example is in the John Kricfalusi cartoon \"Boo Runs Wild\" in which during the fight scene between Yogi and Ranger Smith as they are exchanging punches the sound can be heard as the punches connect.
The environment There are several commonly used thunder sounds. It is also because of the difficulty to record a pure thunder sound without rain in the background. While thunder caused by a lightning strike can last up to and over 40 seconds in Real Life, stock thunder sounds usually last only 1-5 seconds. Castle Thunder, originally made for Universal's Frankenstein in 1931, is the most well-known of them all. Used in many Disney movies made from the 1930s to the late '80s, and on many pre-1991 Hanna-Barbera cartoons, which often had their own distinct stock sound effects library anyway. Scooby-Doo often featured the Castle Thunder, but beginning in the early 2000s they began phasing it out for newly-recorded lightning strikes and thunderclaps that were even sometimes recorded specifically for them (such as in What's New, Scooby-Doo and similar direct-to-video movies), and were very LOUD and real-sounding. (More info on the sound effect.) Generic Horror Thunder; that 'Tchik-ak-ak-ak-ak!' sound that the thunder and lightning always make in horror movies. Did you ever hear that sound in a real storm Those type of sounds occur when lightning strikes close to the viewer. It's not actually thunder, but the sound of the lightning arcing. Perhaps the two most overused thunder sound effects in the media since the 90s are this one from the Sound Ideas Series 6000 \"The General\" library, and one often known as the Dolby Digital Thunderclap\" (named for appearing in the 90s Dolby Digital \"city\" sound system promo). The \"CHTAOW!\" thunder sample featured in the Pet Shop Boys song \"It's a Sin\". Another stock lightning/thunder sound is heard in the Hell sections of Jet Moto 2's Nebulous course, and in The Oregon Trail II when a thunderstorm occurs. Then there are stock sound loops of wind howling and most of them sound like they're passing either some kind of wind corridor or a place with lots of scaffolding and/or guy wires. Wind rarely does those kind of sounds in Real Life where most of the sound is usually generated by foliage which the wind passes through. One of these is used in Marathon 2: Durandal, alongside a stock thunder sound, which is also used in Medal of Honor: Allied Assault's Sniper's Last Stand level. The underwater SCUBA bubbling sound. Heard in Duke Nukem 3D. There's a sound effect of bubbles that's commonly associated with Slippery Soap from Blue's Clues that has also been used in other shows such as The Noddy Shop (where it was used for Johnny Crawfish's aquarium) and The Ren & Stimpy Show. \"Various Slime Squishes and Oozes\" from The General Series 6000 appears in Silent Hill 3, in the Otherworld Hospital's \"Bloody Mirror\" room.
Western Animation Also the sound of children cheering in any cartoon featuring a little league baseball game, also heard in Recess many times. This sound comes from, once again, the Hollywood Edge \"Premiere Edition\" library. A particularly strange use of it was in Home Alone 2: Lost in New York when a bandstand of chorus kids collapses and all the kids panic as it does so. If this is the sound that goes \"hooray\" then it's also heard in Halo 3 on up when the Grunt/Birthday party skull is turned on. And briefly in ICP's song \"Ninja.\" And in P.S.Neeley's beautiful version of the Egyptian game Senet, when a game piece makes it off the board, representing a soul entering Heaven. A very common sound of children playing is used rather prolifically in Codename: Kids Next Door. You'll know the one when you hear someone yell \"oh no!\" Also heard during the Idiosyncratic Wipes. Shapey's scream from Moral Orel. Mel Blanc's hiccups have been used in several later cartoons and sometimes in live action films such as Gremlins and Innerspace. Wakko's distinctive belch from Animaniacs provided by Maurice LaMarche has been used several times in other productions La Marche has been involved in, including the Will Ferrell comedy Elf. Another popular belch sound can be heard in many forms of media, including SpongeBob SquarePants episode \"Squeaky Boots\", the 2002 Scooby-Doo film and Finding Nemo. There's a distinct pair of bodyfall sound effects that originated from Warner Bros. and got used in their feature films and in many Looney Tunes shorts, and have eventually found their way to other studios, to the point where most people associate these bodyfall sounds with the Peanuts franchise (most notably when Charlie Brown falls to the ground after Lucy pulls the football away before he can kick it). 59ce067264
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