(!!Flirt!!^) free websites to meet people

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evasingle
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(!!Flirt!!^) free websites to meet people

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While ‘90s producers had to sift through crates of vinyl to earn the fodder for their tracks, today’s artists have it simpler: with subscription services like Splice and Sounds.com providing all-you-can-eat sample plans, and tools like Loopmasters’ Loopcloud bringing millions of audio files right into the DAW of your choice to audition. And all this has been a boon for producers who can’t or won’t fork out for samples. Today, a simple Google search will turn out thousands of entries as a gateway to seemingly millions - or billions - of free samples.

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But with such a wealth of material out there, it’s sometimes hard to know which one of the many sites to head to. So in this rundown, we do the legwork for you, sorting the wheat from the chaff as we aggregate the aggregators, curate the curators, and shine a spotlight on what are, for our money (or lack of it), the ten best dedicated free sample download websites out there right now. 1. SampleRadar (opens in new tab) Samples: Over 64,000 Rights: Royalty-free. Our own collection of samples is in the late five figures and continues to grow. All of our 64,000-plus samples are royalty-free, which we can guarantee as we’re not acting as aggregators - these unique sounds have been made especially for us via our sister magazines Computer Music and Future Music. We list the sample packs alphabetically, and they’re categorised into themes. SampleRadar is regularly updated and we list the latest update at the top of the main hubpage. 2. LANDR (opens in new tab) Samples: 10,000 Rights: Royalty-free. What started out as an online mastering platform is now becoming a 360-degree service for producers, encompassing distribution, collaboration and now sample-hunting. The best bit about the new sample download service? It’s free for everyone - all that’s needed is to sign up for a LANDR account. LANDR’s sample packs have been created especially for the service by a mixture of artists and LANDR users. Packs can be filtered by Genre, Vibe and Artist, and individual sounds can be filtered by type, genre, key, BPM and more. The company says that, in the future, it plans to accept user-submitted samples that will be included in the offering. 3. BBC Sound Effects (opens in new tab) Samples: 16,000 Rights: Personal, educational and research purposes. The BBC’s authority has long been evident in audio standards and practices, and now the corporation is offering a creative resource to the world as well, in the form of this huge library of 16,000 liberated WAV sound effects. There’s a massive range of sound effects here, from the humdrum (‘two women approach and stop’) to the esoteric (‘Anglo Nubian Goat, exterior, bleating’), although the samples aren’t categorised or even searchable via page URL. The entire collection is being distributed under the RemArc Licence [‘Reminiscence Archive’], meaning that these samples are not for commercial use, but are fair game if you’re using them for unreleased music, educational or research purposes. It’s almost worth paying your TV licence for. 4. SampleFocus (opens in new tab) Samples: Thousands Rights: Royalty-free. SampleFocus is a searchable database of samples that’s well-categorised for browsing, with tags, collections, categories and more guiding any search of the content. This is a modern curated collection, so efforts have been made to tag it from the start. Currently free while in its Beta stage of operation (a fee may be introduced later), this website uses credits for sample ‘purchases’. Users earn ten credits every Monday, and every upload that’s approved by the website nets you a further four credits. Watch out, though: SampleFocus’s download credits system incentivises people to upload as many samples as possible in order to download some of their own. 5. Bedroom Producers’ Blog Sample Archive (opens in new tab) Samples: Over 1,400 sources Rights: Various. This producers’ website has been charting free sample pack releases since 2010, meaning there’s eight years’ worth of prime content to go for. Rather than distributing the samples itself, BPB is more of an aggregator, but it’s one of the very best such sites out there when it comes to sample collections and Kontakt instruments. Some of the entries - especially the older ones - may not exist any longer, or may be introductory offers that have expired, but there’s more than enough to get along with here. 6. SampleSwap (opens in new tab) Samples: 15,000 Rights: Mostly royalty-free, but not guaranteed. SampleSwap is chokablok with free, high-quality sounds that have been very well categorised in over the decade that the site’s been online. You’ll find every type of drum hit as well as loops and breaks, full kits, multisampled instruments, acapella vocals, ambience and noises, and even whole pieces of royalty-free music. SampleSwap is supported by donations, and many of the samples are uploaded by users. Because of this, the website cannot guarantee the rights status of every single one, although it does mention that most of the samples are royalty-free. 7. FreeSound.org (opens in new tab) Samples: 800+ Rights: Public domain. FreeSound is less a musical resource, and more a treasure trove of public-domain sound effects and real-world sources.













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