That’s pretty cool. May I make a suggestion? Open the original recording in a spectrogram editor, like RX11. Alter the mid to upper harmonics to give the growl more bite. Then find a tonal element in the roar. There’s got to be one in there somewhere. Take that sine wave, (or the closest thing to it), and build an artificial harmonic series with it. You could add square waves at the same frequency, or duplicate the sine wave and copy and paste it into a new document and double it with some modulation or transpose it, then paste it back in the original. That might sound more natural than the granular delay.
Yo Sam, record some elephants if you can!!! Their low frequency drops down to 5hz or lower. It’s below our hearing range,but the sound can travel for up to 5 miles…
You completely nailed that! What a great video 🎉
awesome creativity
Love this type of videos! Really original!
Thanks so much!
That’s pretty cool. May I make a suggestion? Open the original recording in a spectrogram editor, like RX11. Alter the mid to upper harmonics to give the growl more bite. Then find a tonal element in the roar. There’s got to be one in there somewhere. Take that sine wave, (or the closest thing to it), and build an artificial harmonic series with it. You could add square waves at the same frequency, or duplicate the sine wave and copy and paste it into a new document and double it with some modulation or transpose it, then paste it back in the original. That might sound more natural than the granular delay.
Great video. Keep doing ones like this one!
Thanks for enjoying it! I’d love to do one with bees at some point
Dude that actually sounds fire
Thanks! Yeah I like how it turned out
Pretty wild!
Yo Sam, record some elephants if you can!!!
Their low frequency drops down to 5hz or lower. It’s below our hearing range,but the sound can travel for up to 5 miles…
Oh damn! I’ll have to check that out. Thanks for the suggestion.