Flip the Media
A blog about the digital media revolution

Today we talk about foley. Your film creation cannot live on music alone, unless you are making a silent movie, or you make sure you record every footstep sound carefully, you will need some sounds effects to enhance the action on the screen.  Most professional editing suites come packaged with all sorts bits and bites that you can use. If you do not have those, there is hope on the internet for non-commercial use: basically for free for students and filmmakers for online distribution and film festivals, with possibility of licensing for commercial when (more realistically, if) needed.

The resource I want to share with you today is The Freesound Project. Freesound makes available an ever-growing database of sound effect licensed under the Creative Commons Sampling Plus 1.0 license. This means you can use and abuse the samples for non-commercial purposes including remixing, file sharing and webcasting.

You may search the site using freeform text, tags, descriptions, usernames, or geotags.  There is also a “sounds-like” type of browsing available on the site. An account is required, but sign-up is free.

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This entry was posted on Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009 at 10:33 pm.
Categories: Content Creation, Distribution, Storytelling.
Tags:, , , , , , , , , , , ,
Posted by jaysh.

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One Comment, Comment or Ping

  1. Plenty of artists offer CC music directly on their sites for download. I used some CC music from Nine Inch Nails in one video. It never hurts to see which artists are being progressive.

Reply to “The Search for the Elusive CC Music (Part 3/3)”