The Vengeance Melodic Techno Vol. 1 sample pack is a comprehensive library designed by Manuel Schleis, featuring over 2,750 high-quality WAV samples tailored for Melodic Techno, Deep House, and Progressive styles. Pack Overview & Contents
The library is roughly 2.25 GB and split into 75% one-shots and 25% loops.
Drums: Includes soft and hard kicks, claps, snares, cymbals, hi-hats, and diverse percussion (low/high).
Loops: Features clearly structured drum loops (solo hats, shaker, beats, fills) and sub-bass loops.
Melodic & Synth: Deep melodic loops, synth stabs, and one-shots designed for "warm analog" textures.
Special Features: Contains vocal verses and choruses from 4 different singers, providing unique human elements for your tracks. Vengeance Melodic Techno Vol. 1 -WAV-
Tempo Syncing: All loops are provided at 120, 123, 125, and 128 BPM for easy integration into various project tempos. Production Workflow Guide
Foundation Setting: Start with the sub-bass loops or low-pass filtered saw wave bass samples. Ensure sub-bass frequencies below 120Hz are in mono for club compatibility.
Rhythm Layering: Use the "kick-less" and "clap-less" loops to layer over your main drums, allowing you to build complex grooves without frequency clashing.
Dynamic Movement: Apply LFO modulation to filter cutoffs on the synth stabs to create the evolving, "breathing" sound characteristic of melodic techno.
Atmospheric Depth: Utilize the included atmospheric FX and rising/falling transition effects to build epic breakdowns. Consider heavy reverb and delay on atmo samples to fill the spectral field. The Vengeance Melodic Techno Vol
Vocal Integration: Use the vocal choruses and verses as focal points. Pitch-shifting or "chopping" these vocals can add a modern, futuristic touch to your arrangements. Vengeance Sound VPS Avenger Expansion - Hypertechno
You have purchased the WAVs. You have unzipped the folder. Now what? Here is a professional workflow to turn these samples into a finished track in under two hours.
Step 1: The Foundation Drag a "Kick_01" from the Kicks folder into your DAW. Layer "Sub_Bass_04" underneath it. Notice how the Vengeance team has already aligned the phase of the kick and bass so they don't cancel each other out. This is the "Vengeance glue."
Step 2: The Groove Import a "Top_Shuffle_120bpm" loop. Loop it over 8 bars. Immediately, you will hear the head-nod swing. To avoid it sounding like a "sample pack loop," chop the loop every 2 bars. Remove the third beat. Add a high-pass filter sweep. Now it is yours.
Step 3: The Hook Browse the Synth Loops folder. Find a minor pluck arpeggio. Because the original WAV is pristine, you can pitch it up or down by 5 semitones without losing fidelity (a massive advantage of Vengeance’s 24-bit recording standards). Add a delay (1/4 note dotted) and a massive reverb (Valhalla or Raum). Production Workflow: How to use this pack today
Step 4: The Arrangement Use the Build FX folder. These are risers, white noise sweeps, and reverse cymbals. Drag a harsh noise riser before your drop. Automate the volume of the reverb return. Watch as your arrangement instantly gains professional "lift."
Vengeance — Melodic Techno Vol. 1 is a sample pack aimed at producers working in modern melodic techno, progressive techno, and adjacent electronic subgenres. Pack formats typically include high-quality WAV loops and one-shots, MIDI files, and presets; this WAV-specific release focuses on raw audio material you can drag into any DAW for immediate use.
When you download Vengeance Melodic Techno Vol. 1 -WAV-, you aren't getting generic 808s. You are getting a surgical scalpel for the modern underground. The pack is divided into several critical subsections.
The "melodic" qualifier is critical. Where standard techno samples focus on texture and percussion, Vol. 1 would dedicate nearly half its content to harmonic elements. Expect folders of minor-key piano chords (processed with heavy reverb and delay), evolving synth pads with long, cinematic attacks, and arpeggiated sequences that sit squarely in the Dorian or Phrygian modes.
However, a distinct challenge emerges: melodic techno thrives on uniqueness. A producer using a Vengeance melodic loop verbatim risks immediate identification. Therefore, the pack’s true value lies not in the loops but in the one-shots—the individual pluck, the raw saw wave, the vocal chop. These elements invite deconstruction. The savvy producer would slice the pre-written melodic loops into granular fragments, re-pitching and reversing them to create original motifs. The pack thus operates as a raw quarry, offering both finished bricks (loops for quick arrangement) and raw stone (single hits for sound design).