The iconic roar made by Godzilla was produced by rubbing a leather glove across the strings of a double bass.
Godzilla's Roar Was Made With a Double Bass and Glove
When Godzilla first stomped onto screens in 1954, audiences had never heard anything like its terrifying roar. That's because composer Akira Ifukube didn't record an animal—he created one of cinema's most iconic sounds using a musical instrument, a leather glove, and some pine tar resin.
The sound effects team initially tried using actual animal recordings to create the monster's voice. Lions, tigers, bears—nothing worked. The sounds were too recognizable, too earthly for a creature that was supposed to embody nuclear horror and ancient rage.
The Double Bass Technique
Ifukube's breakthrough was brilliantly simple. He took a leather glove, coated it with pine tar resin, and slowly dragged it down the loosened strings of a double bass (also called a contrabass). The friction created a deep, resonant growl unlike anything in nature.
His assistant, Sei Ikeno, performed the actual recording while Ifukube directed. But the raw sound was just the beginning. Sound engineer Hisashi Shimonaga then manipulated the recordings—adjusting playback speeds, adding echo effects, and layering in some of those rejected animal sounds to add depth and texture.
Why It Worked So Well
The double bass technique created something crucial: a sound that felt wrong in the best possible way. It was organic enough to seem alive but alien enough to be unsettling. The low frequencies rumbled in your chest, triggering a primal fear response.
- The resin-coated glove created irregular friction patterns that sounded like breathing
- The loose strings produced wavering pitches that suggested something massive and unstable
- The echo effects made the roar fill space, as if coming from a creature several stories tall
This wasn't just clever sound design—it was psychological warfare. Ifukube understood that the most frightening sounds are those our brains can't quite categorize.
The Legacy Lives On
When Legendary Pictures rebooted Godzilla in 2014, sound designers Erik Aadahl and Ethan Van der Ryn started by recreating Ifukube's original technique. They got their own double bass, coated gloves in resin, and recorded. But they quickly discovered that what worked for 1954 mono speakers didn't have enough punch for modern 12-channel IMAX systems.
Still, they kept the glove-on-bass sound as the foundation, layering it with additional elements to create a roar worthy of contemporary cinema. Even with all our modern technology, Ifukube's 70-year-old technique remains the essential ingredient.
The double bass roar has been used in every Godzilla film since 1954, making it one of the longest-running sound effects in cinema history. It's been tweaked, layered, and remastered countless times, but that original resin-and-strings DNA is always there.
A Sound That Changed Cinema
Ifukube's innovation inspired generations of sound designers to think beyond literal recordings. Why record a real dinosaur (impossible) or a real alien (also impossible) when you can create something more effective from unexpected sources?
Today, film students still learn about the Godzilla roar as a masterclass in creative problem-solving. Sometimes the most memorable sounds don't come from capturing reality—they come from inventing it with a musical instrument and a well-placed glove.
