--- toby@xxxxxxxxxx wrote: > Alexandre Prokoudine wrote: > > Hi! > > > > What a way would you suggest me to go, if I > decided to emulate a sound of > > an explosion? > > > > I would try blowing up a paper bag, and recording > the > sound of bursting it between your hands. Then, > slow the sound down by a factor which should be in > accordance to the desired size of the explosion. I remember reading something about the audio production for a tornado sound for some Hollywood movie. They used around 180 tracks which included, cows, car crashes, breaking glass, etc. I've never done this type of sound design. With Tobiah's paper bag idea, you can make many copies and apply different reverb settings as needed. Perhaps you'll need one track with a long reverb delay and no tail which might create the initial Bang and secondary boom. And another with a huge reverb room, and long tail to create the impression of a sound wave that's traveling many miles. With numerous tracks you'll be able to mix the level of the different effect results. ron > Tobiah > __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! SiteBuilder - Free, easy-to-use web site design software http://sitebuilder.yahoo.com