We have just released a new series of CDs titled Wild Bird
Soundscapes, Doug. Featuring birds in context of the entire biophony
in which they live, each of the birds within that context are noted
on the backs of each CD. The following is a sample of the titles
featuring birds. (There's also a series featuring Great American
Soundscapes, amphibians, fish, etc.) For example:
All best,
Bernie Krause
Wild Sanctuary, Inc.
P. O. Box 536
Glen Ellen, CA 95442
707-996-6677 tel
707-996-0280 fax
http://www.wildsanctuary.com
>At 10:13 AM 6/26/2003, Rudy wrote:
>
>>Doug, you mentioned a few references that you thought were a good way
>>for interested listeners to get over this hump. Would you care to
>>reiterate that list?
>
>Sure, I find the ones I use most are authored by two of our esteemed list
>members - Kevin Colver and Lang Elliot. Kevin's are the Stokes Field Guide
>to Bird Song, Western Edition and Lang's is the eastern counterpart, Stokes
>Field Guide to Bird Song, Eastern Edition. Both are excellent in their
>breadth - meaning they have several examples of most birds' songs and calls
>- enough to really give you the idea. The recordings on them are excellent,
>of course! For the neotropics I use David Ross's CDs, Voices of Costa Rican
>Birds and Voices of the Cloud Forest.
>
>Cornell also has some excellent references, like those by Geoff Keller,
>Bird Songs of California and
>Bird Songs of the Rocky Mountain States and Provinces and Bird Songs of
>Southeast Arizona and Sonora, Mexico.
>
>For Frogs and toads, I use Lang's The Calls of Frogs and Toads and the old
>Smithsonian Folkways recordings' Sounds of North American Frogs.
>
>My favorite resource, though is always the web - sites like Walter's for
>frogs, mine for birds, and lots of others - there you will hear more
>complete "vocabularies" and often some of the more unusual sounds a species
>makes.
>
>The "hump" for most non-biologists or birders, is that it's necessary to
>know at least something about birds or frogs to get started. Knowing at
>least the family that the subject belongs to will usually be sufficient to
>get started. That's not as hard as it seems - we all know what a woodpecker
>is, or a duck, or maybe a flycatcher or a quail - with that basic info you
>can start searching through the references.
>
>There are other resources, certainly, and I'd like to hear from anyone on
>the list who likes a particular set of CDs or a web site, or has done one.
>It would be nice to have a list for the future FAQ of reference recordings
>from around the world.
>
>By the way, I find it extremely useful to "rip" the reference CDs onto a
>secondary hard drive and have them all at my fingertips as I edit my own
>recordings. In CoolEdit if you select "open file" and then just click once
>on each file in a directory it will preview that sound without loading it -
>very handy for running through a bunch of possibilities quickly.
>
>Doug
>
>
>Doug Von Gausig
>Clarkdale, Arizona, USA
>Moderator
>Nature Recordists e-mail group
>http://groups.yahoo.com/group/naturerecordists
>
>
>
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