Revidden is the conjured convergence of two classic Digitone Sound Packs into one new and bewitching collection of sounds for its successor, becoming Digitone II’s debut pack in the process. Master sound crafter Eraldo Bernocchi, who created Hidden and Revealed, the aforementioned duo back in 2018, presents another 120 wondrous patches, making the most of Digitone II’s deep and varied sound-sculpting tools. It channels both the seen and the unseen with a more advanced spellbook - a fresh gathering for a new age of dark and light, split into two folders. One leans unashamedly into darker beats, tones, and timbres - a murky, uncanny swarm to explore the underside of sound. The other offers a more inviting and familiar twist on that, providing a surer footing in a more accessible, tangible sonic realm.
Bernocchi is a seasoned sound creator across many different genres: experimental music, ritual ambient, soundtrack work, doom, and more. This pack has plenty of melodic and rhythmic variety to choose from, with tons of leads, pads, basses, and organs - many of them evolving or arpeggiated - plus a delightful spread of kicks, percussion, noise, and more.
I’m also interested because I have the two previous packs (Hidden & Reveal) and I’m not sure if there will be much overlap between the presets from the old packs and this new one.
@Holografik and @Kowalski the sounds are different from the old soundpacks and they were made with all the new synthesis types present in the DN2 this one below is a VERY poor example, I made it in a few minutes, but at least you can easily distinguish the various sounds. To give you an idea, the arpeggio comes from the “FM drum” machine and there is also a “Swarmer” and a “Wavetone”, not bad I would say…
Sorry guys, I usually remove access to these files on Drive after a few hours, now it’s available again for everyone for the whole day. The track is crap but the presets of the soundpack are very nice in my opinion, highly recommended
People who have had this for a while, are the sound design techniques unusual or interesting? Wondering how useful this pack would be for expanding my sound design techniques, or if everything is fairly basic/standard practice.