Portal:Featured sounds

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Featured sounds in Wikipedia

This star symbolizes the featured content on Wikipedia.

The featured sounds are what we believe to be the best sounds in Wikipedia. Prior to being listed here, sounds are reviewed at Wikipedia:Featured sound candidates.

At present, there are 62 featured sounds in 95 parts. For the latest featured sounds, see this month's featured log. Sounds that no longer meet the criteria can be proposed for removal by being listed at Wikipedia:Featured sound candidates#Nominations for removal.

See Wikipedia:Media help for help with playing sound files on Wikipedia. On the list below, "play" allows one to play the file in the browser without special software.

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Contents

[edit] Music

See also: Historical recordings

[edit] By date

Organised, by date of composition or (where that is not available) date of performance. Where dating is particularly ambiguous, the date is marked with "?". Arrangements not notable in their own right are listed by date of the original composition.

The 11th-century "Victimae Paschali Laudes", traditionally attributed to Wipo of Burgundy, is one of the few traditional Latin "sequences" still used by the Roman Catholic Church today.
A 12th-century song by Comtessa Beatritz de Dia, "A Chantar" is the only existing song by a trobairitz which survives with its music.
From Ordo Virtutum (c.1151) by Abbess Hildegard of Bingen (1098–1179). Performed by Makemi
A selection from Dieterich Buxtehude's cantata Was frag ich nach der Welt
A polacca from Le trompeur trompé, an 1800 opéra comique by Pierre Gaveaux and François Bernard-Valville. Performed on historical instruments, with Montserrat Alavedra as Agathe.
Brass band arrangement of the Hunters' Chorus from The Lily of Killarney using period instruments. During the 19th century, brass bands began to spring up throughout Europe and America. Popular music, including operas, were arranged for them by composers and music sellers eager to cash in on the free advertising they provided.
An 1870 French song about the Army of Sambre-et-Meuse by Robert Planquette and Paul Cézano. Sung by Pierre d'Assy in 1905.
1930 recording of the Japanese national anthem, Kimi ga Yo. Includes both the vocal and instrumental parts.
An adaptation of the Skye Boat Song for bagpipes played by the Clan Stewart Pipe Band.
A complete recording of Camille Saint-Saëns' The Carnival of the Animals (in fourteen movements) by pianists Neil and Nancy O'Doan and the Seattle Youth Symphony. Conducted by Vilem Sokol.
Antonio Pasculli's Gran Concerto on themes from Verdi's I Vespri Siciliani . Performed by Alex Klein, oboe, and Lisa Bergman, piano.
Wax cylinder recording from German New Guinea on August 23, 1904, recorded by German anthropologist Rudolf Pöch
1910 Edison Records recording of vaudeville performer Edward M. Favor's rendition of Clarence Wainwright Murphy's song How can they tell that I'm Irish?
"Memphis Blues", composed by W. C. Handy in 1912. This is the first known recording, performed by the Victor Military Band, July 15, 1914.
Instrumental version of the most famous song from the 1921 musical Shuffle Along, recorded during its original Broadway run. Later used as a presidential campaign song for Harry Truman.
Prohibition era song by Skidmore--Walker, sung by Duke Rogers, recorded by Thomas Edison's studio, 1922. Duration 3:29.
Carmen Miranda and Mário Reis, recorded and released in 1933
Carmen Miranda and Mário Reis, recorded in 1933, released in 1934
A 1938 teuroteu by Kim Song Kyu and Park Yeong Ho. Sung by Park Hyang Rim.
A gospel song sung by the Golden Jubilee Quartet detailing the story of the Book of Jonah.
A gospel song sung by the Cochran Field Singers.
A World War II gospel song sung by Bertha Houston and her congregation.
An example of new age music, performed on the recorder, from the 1995 album Refractions by Colin Ross
A song from Bulgarian folk metal band Balkandji's first album, Probuzhdane ("Awake")
Music from the Open Source game Battle for Wesnoth, demonstrating many key features of modern video game music


[edit] Undateable

An example of a singer reading shape notes, this shows how a trained shape note singer would have the music to "Star of the East" marked up in the shape note tradition's modified solfege.


[edit] Recordings in multiple parts

[edit] Ludwig van Beethoven – Moonlight Sonata

Ludwig van Beethoven: Piano Sonata No. 14 in C sharp minor Op. 27 No. 2 – Moonlight (1801)


[edit] Antonio Vivaldi – The Four Seasons

Antonio Vivaldi: The Four Seasons (Le quattro stagioni, 1725). Performed by the Wichita State University Chamber Players; violin, John Harrison.

Concerto No. 1 in E major, Op. 8, RV 269, "La primavera" (Spring)

Concerto No. 2 in G minor, Op. 8, RV 315, "L'estate" (Summer)

Concerto No. 3 in F major, Op. 8, RV 293, "L'autunno" (Autumn)

Concerto No. 4 in F minor, Op. 8, RV 297, "L'inverno" (Winter)


[edit] Franz Schubert – Impromptu in B flat

Franz Schubert's Impromptu in B flat (1827, D. 935/3; Op. 142 No. 3)


A combined version is also available:


[edit] Ludwig van Beethoven - Piano Sonata No. 28

Ludwig van Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 28 in A major, Op. 101 (1816). Performed by Daniel Veesey from Musopen.com.

See also: Beethoven's original sketch of the fourth movement.


[edit] Charles Gounod - Petite Symphonie pour neuf instruments à vent

Charles Gounod's Petite Symphonie pour neuf instruments à vent (Little Symphony for Nine Woodwinds, 1885). Performed by the Soni Ventorum: Felix Skowronek, flute; Laila Storch, oboe; William McColl, clarinet; Christopher Leuba, horn; Arthur Grossman, Bassoon; and guest performers Ove Hanson, oboe; Julie Oster, clarinet; David Cottrell, horn; and Robert Olson, bassoon.


[edit] Molière and Jean-Baptiste Lully - Le Bourgeois gentilhomme

The ballet music by Jean-Baptiste Lully from Le Bourgeois gentilhomme Molière's 1670 comédie-ballet (that is, a ballet broken up by spoken scenes). This version was performed by the Advent Chamber Orchestra in 2007.


[edit] Field recordings

[edit] Animals

Field recording of an alligator by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service
The morning song of the American robin
A common blackbird (Turdus merula) singing in a forest in southern Finland.


[edit] Other

Walking on singing sand at "Kotogahama" Beach in Nimacho, Odashi, Shimane, Japan
A recording of a suikinkutsu, a type of Japanese garden ornament and musical device.


[edit] Historical recordings

[edit] History of recording

This 1860 phonautogram by Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville is the earliest known recording of the human voice, though it was never intended to be played back.
The earliest surviving phonograph cylinder recording of music. Recorded on a paraffin cylinder on June 29, 1888 by George Gouraud.
The Lost Chord, recorded by George Gouraud. It was played at the August 14, 1888 press conference that introduced the phonograph to London.
A very early wax cylinder recording (October 5, 1888) of composer Arthur Sullivan. It was created in London by George Gouraud as an audio letter to be sent back to Edison.
United States military song recorded during the Spanish–American War by Emile Berliner, inventor of the first lateral disc audio record, one year after he received the patent on the device.
This 1906 recording enticed store customers with the wonders of an exciting invention: the phonograph cylinder.


[edit] Other

Excerpts of a speech given by Theodore Roosevelt at Carnegie Hall, March 12, 1912, recorded August 12 by Thomas Edison. The time constraints of the wax cylinder medium probably required the abridgement.
A recording of the Star-Spangled Banner, later the national anthem of the United States, by widower President Woodrow Wilson's First Lady, his daughter Margaret Woodrow Wilson
Neville Chamberlain announcing that Britain was at war with Germany, over the wireless, on 3 September 1939
Farewell address by United States president Dwight D. Eisenhower from January 17, 1961. Duration 15:30.
The full audio recording of the inaugural address made by John F. Kennedy after being sworn in as the thirty-fifth President of the United States on January 20, 1961. Duration 14:00.
The sentence uttered by Neil Armstrong upon being the first human to walk on the moon during the Apollo 11 moon landing on July 21, 1969
James A. Lovell, Jr, Apollo 13 Commander, reporting an explosion on 13 April 1970. Duration 0:17.
George W. Bush's address to the people of the United States, September 11, 2001, 8:30pm EDT.


[edit] Other

The Shepard-Risset glissando, a type of aural illusion: The sound seems to descend forever, without ever actually getting any lower in pitch.



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