Rain
Sprezza
“Rain.mp3” is rainwater plunging about 12 feet from a rooftop to a puddle below.
“Rain_1.mp3,” “Rain_2.mp3,” and “Rain_4.mp3” are very brief excerpts from a longer recording of rain from the same session: each a fraction of a second, recording the plink of water falling on a metal object: probably the lid of a Weber grill.
“Rain_3.mp3” is a recording of rain on a mixed landscape of trees and smaller plants, a flagstone patio, the aforementioned Weber Grill, etc. It’s a substantial portion of the longer recording from which I excerpted “Rain_1.mp3,” “Rain_2.mp3,” and “Rain_4.mp3.”
I have grouped these files this way because they are thematically related and I recorded the two source files during the same session. What I mean is, if ccMixter provided folders or some other hierarchical structure, or something like Flickr’s “sets,” I would have used that; but maybe I’m not really grokking ccMixter the way I should. Would tags be enough? Let me know if this kind of grouping makes the recordings inaccessible or otherwise inconvenient to work with, and I’ll break them loose.
“Rain_1.mp3,” “Rain_2.mp3,” and “Rain_4.mp3” are very brief excerpts from a longer recording of rain from the same session: each a fraction of a second, recording the plink of water falling on a metal object: probably the lid of a Weber grill.
“Rain_3.mp3” is a recording of rain on a mixed landscape of trees and smaller plants, a flagstone patio, the aforementioned Weber Grill, etc. It’s a substantial portion of the longer recording from which I excerpted “Rain_1.mp3,” “Rain_2.mp3,” and “Rain_4.mp3.”
I have grouped these files this way because they are thematically related and I recorded the two source files during the same session. What I mean is, if ccMixter provided folders or some other hierarchical structure, or something like Flickr’s “sets,” I would have used that; but maybe I’m not really grokking ccMixter the way I should. Would tags be enough? Let me know if this kind of grouping makes the recordings inaccessible or otherwise inconvenient to work with, and I’ll break them loose.