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Sound Ideas is a Canadian audio company and the archive of one of the largest commercially available sound effects libraries in the world. [2] [3] It has accumulated the sound effects, which it releases in collections by download or on CD and hard drive, through acquisition, exclusive arrangement with movie studios, [4] and in-house production.
Sound 360 was the name of a motion picture sound system used by 20th Century-Fox to enhance the premiere engagements of their 1977 feature Damnation Alley. [ 1 ] The format employed the standard 35mm magnetic stereo soundtracks (left, center , right and surround ) in a unique configuration.
20th_Century-Fox_fanfare_1947.webm (WebM audio/video file, VP9/Opus, length 12 s, 480 × 360 pixels, 384 kbps overall, file size: 561 KB) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
AC'97 (Audio Codec '97; also MC'97 for Modem Codec '97) is an audio codec standard developed by Intel Architecture Labs and various codec manufacturers in 1997. The standard was used in motherboards , modems , and sound cards .
20th Century Fox Records (also known as 20th Fox Records and 20th Century Records, or simply 20th Century Fox Film Scores and Fox Records) was a wholly owned subsidiary of film studio 20th Century Fox. The history of the label covers three distinct 20th Century Fox-related operations in the analog era, ranging chronologically from about 1938 to ...
Pages in category "20th Century Fox Records soundtracks" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The success of Sensurround as an effect led rival studios to develop their own audio enhancements. 20th Century Fox released Damnation Alley (1977) in Sound 360 (and mixed Alien in Sensurround following Sound 360's failure), and Warner Brothers employed their Megasound process for Altered States (1980), Outland (1981), Wolfen (1981) and ...
The first feature film released using the Fox Movietone system was Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans (1927), directed by F. W. Murnau. This film was the first professionally produced feature film with an optical soundtrack. The sound in the film included music and sound effects but only a few unsynchronized spoken words.