The music tracks on many (sounds+music) are often synthesiser based.
These recordings are now a timescale of analogue and digital sampling
evolution. The early CD synthesiser tracks are now unlistenable because
they sound so primitive.
I have two CD where each producer has sampled animal noises and separated the sounds into tones. He then painstakingly spliced these tones together in a new order to make the animals sound like a human conversation was occurring. A bit like dogs singing the happy birthday song on Youtube. They call this creation art or a collage or sound tapestry.
Another CD has carefully sequenced natural sounds of birds (example penguins in water, jumping onto rocks, climbing the beach, greeting mate, feed chick, etc). Unfortunately, the recordings were from different locations and even countries which question its authenticity.
This isn't an expensive hobby. The last CD went from list $26.95, sale $4, reduced $0.95, finally purchased for $1.25 in a thrift shop.
I have two CD where each producer has sampled animal noises and separated the sounds into tones. He then painstakingly spliced these tones together in a new order to make the animals sound like a human conversation was occurring. A bit like dogs singing the happy birthday song on Youtube. They call this creation art or a collage or sound tapestry.
Another CD has carefully sequenced natural sounds of birds (example penguins in water, jumping onto rocks, climbing the beach, greeting mate, feed chick, etc). Unfortunately, the recordings were from different locations and even countries which question its authenticity.
This isn't an expensive hobby. The last CD went from list $26.95, sale $4, reduced $0.95, finally purchased for $1.25 in a thrift shop.