Because the sound played backwards is unnatural to our ears, and since our minds aren't used to the concept of backwards-playing our natural response is to be scared or nervous of it, as with many other things unknown to us. Of course backwards-recordings don't provoke any kind of curses or anything to be scared or worried about.
"Sound that is an imitation of another sound" can be an echo, a recording, or an imitation.
electronic and paper
Sound devices are devices for analog and digital audio products for radio, television, film, and music recording.
When a microphone's polarity is reversed, the resulting audio signal will be out of phase with other audio signals in the recording or sound system. This can cause cancellation of frequencies and a thin, weak sound. It is important to keep microphone polarities consistent throughout a recording or performance to avoid phase cancellation issues.
When you hear yourself talk, most of the sound that you hear passed through the bones of the skull, not the air. These bones have resonances and act as filters changing the sound that arrives at your ears. When you hear yourself talk on a recording the sound passed through the air and is unfiltered, this is what other people hear when you talk So in fact you sound normal on the recording (as others hear you) and wierd when you just hear yourself directly. You just aren't used to hearing how you really sound.
Big Scary Monsters Recording Company was created in 2002.
well basically its like an evil version of the song when played backwards but im not that sure about it check out waybullo!thats evil!!
The sound recording is crystal clear.
(Say it by sound) backwards
Platinum Sound Recording Studios was created in 2000.
Phillips' Sound Recording Services died in 1984.
moan
Phillips' Sound Recording Services was born in 1896-03.
a field recording
The recording of sight rather than sound.
The word "scary" has a long e sound, as in "ee," not a long a sound. This is because the letter "a" in "scary" is followed by the letter "r," which changes the pronunciation of the vowel to a long e sound. The phonetic transcription of "scary" would be /ˈskɛri/, indicating the long e sound.
When sound moves forwards and backwards rapidly, it is called oscillation. This back-and-forth movement is what creates sound waves.