Description
Demo 1: Techno Trance Blaster – Loops & Samples
“Techno Trance Blaster – Loops & Samples” works in all DAWS and is 100% royalty free.
Soundtrack Loops Introduces Techno Trance Blaster – Loops & Samples, a classic sample PLP pack revived and updated modern times. It’s built for the emotional, driving edge of electronic dance music. Whether you’re building a Berlin-style warehouse banger or a cinematic industrial score, this pack gives you all the tools to command your DAW with authority.
Why Choose This Sound Pack?
Because Trance and Techno combined is unstoppable. Techno Trance Blaster delivers everything you need to sculpt pulsing grooves, emotional atmospheres, and raw rhythm layers. It’s designed by producers who live and breathe underground culture, ensuring an authentic and usable collection that inspires instantly.
This sound pack includes ACIDized.WAV, Apple Loops .AIFF. This ensures that no matter what digital audio workstation (DAW) you use, you can seamlessly integrate these sounds into your projects.
History Of The Trance / Techno Hybrid
Trance grew out of late-1980s to early-1990s techno, acid-house and Balearic/ambient influences in Europe. Producers began taking techno’s driving 4/4 rhythms and club-focused production and layering more melodic, hypnotic pads, long rising breakdowns and emotionally charged motifs — and by the early 1990s that blend was already being released as what we now call trance (and later, substyles such as tech-trance). Artists such as Jam & Spoon, The Age of Love, and Dance 2 Trance were some of the front runners to pair the genres in a hybrid fashion. Some early trance innovators cite EBM (or dance music influenced by industrial/EBM) among their influences or in the milieu in which they were producing. For example, in Frankfurt’s electronic music scene in the ‘80s, EBM was reportedly among the most popular styles of electronic music before trance fully formed. Outside of the rave / trance-techno scene, there was the Industrial / EBM scene already flaunting a different but related hybrid derived from industrial, electropunk, synth‐punk and early electronic music. EBM (Electronic Body Music), which emerged in the early‐to‐mid 1980s in Belgium and Germany, was pioneered by acts like Front 242, D.A.F., Nitzer Ebb, A Split-Second, Signal Aout 42, and others.
Testimonials
- “These are the classic PLP sounds I love so much! Thank you for bringing this back to life.”
— Dj Mar & Dean - “The return of a classic! I’ve made so many bangers with this pack back in the day”
— Dj MomentumZipped Contents (900 MB)
Instruments
Instruments (Cont.)