Mobile Phone Slide Guitar

Space Cubes DetailThis deranged-lofi-noise-fest was extracted directly from my voicemail. I suspect that it was left by the same person who has left other strange voicemails for me in the past. In this case I have learned that the sound source was a guitar being played with a mobile phone as a slide while the same phone was leaving me a message. So, while the guitar produced the sound, the mobile phone was a slide, a microphone, and a recording device all in one.

Mobile Phone Slide Guitar

Lofi Storm Ambiance

Tonight I shot a video in an alley in Northeast Minneapolis as a thunder storm rolled in. I shot it with my mobile phone and then converted it to a wav file for today’s sound. Rather than inlcude the video I have put the audio here after compressing it as an mp3. I also included a shot of the storm clouds as I saw them. In the beginning of the recording I hear some chimes then the wind overdrives the mic a bit. On the whole, the recording seems to be made of mostly wind noise.

Lofi Storm Ambiance

 

Phone Recording of Car Park Reverberation

The scene is a huge and deserted underground car park around 3am. You shut the door to your vehicle. the sound reverberates for almost a minute. What do you do? Do it again! I found myself in this position after a late evening out with my wife recently. Unfortunately all I had available to make a recording was my mobile phone. So, I set it to record and started opening and closing the door to my wife’s pickup truck, listening to the results. I knew the recording would suck, but I had to take a crack at it. As you may have heard, my wife thinks I’m crazy. As long as she doesn’t find out it’s true, I think I’m ok.

Car Park Reverb

Phone Recording of Drum Jam in Mexico

You may have thought that I have posted some random clips of audio on this site in the past. That is a fair statement, but tonight I have converted seventeen recordings I have made with my Sony Ericsson K800i mobile phone to .wav format. They are more nostalgic than useful so I won’t be posting all of them, but they do have a certain charm in an ultra lofi way.

The phone records sound at 16 bit. The sampling rate, on the other hand, is only 8 kHz – nowhere near the fidelity of standard audio CDs (44.1 kHz). So here is something on a pretty high magnitude of randomness: a drum jam I recorded at a little open air club in Playa del Carmen, Mexico back in March, 2007. The music was good. The tequila was better. The recording is awful. If you brave this one out, then you know what an 8 kHz phone recording sounds like.

Phone Recording of Drum Jam in Mexico