A tornado doesn't sound like wind. Survivors describe it as freight trains, jet engines at full thrust, or a long sustained roar that doesn't rise or fall — and that's the detail most weather edits get wrong. Wind has texture and gust; a tornado has pressure. The siren that precedes it carries its own meaning: in the United States the slow rising wail is muscle memory, the sound that empties parking lots in under a minute.
This category covers 15 clips across both halves of that experience — the rising civil-defense siren in its various regional types, the sustained funnel roar, alarm drills used in tornado-warning systems, and the lower rumbling beds that work under wide storm shots. Free MP3 downloads, no signup, and the files are clean enough for documentary work. Useful for weather-channel cuts, disaster-film foley, storm-chaser vlogs, or any sequence where the audience needs to feel the pressure drop before the visual lands.