Purchase on Vengeance-Sound.com Tips for Using Vengeance Samples in Your Production

Manuel Schleis has an ear for what works in a club environment. His processing techniques gave these samples a "warmth" and "thickness" that is hard to replicate.

Released as the successor to the groundbreaking Volume 1, VEC2 didn't just provide sounds; it provided the industry standard . Created by Manuel Schleis and Mutekki, this pack defined the sonic characteristics of Hands Up, Trance, Hardstyle, and early Electro House.

Crisp, wide claps and synthesized snares that defined the rhythm of 2000s dance music.

: Many loops in VEC2 were recorded at classic tempos like 140 BPM. Use your DAW’s high-quality warping algorithms (like Ableton's Complex Pro or FL Studio's Elastique) to stretch them to your project tempo without losing transient punch.

A: Approximately 420 MB for the compressed WAV files, or roughly 690 MB as an ISO disc image.

When you hear a "Vengeance Kick" or those iconic "white noise" sweeps in a classic track, there is a very high probability they originated from this specific library. What’s Inside the Pack?

Unlike newer, niche sample packs that might cover a temporary trend, the Essential series provides the foundational elements that remain relevant in dance music, regardless of current trends. How to Find the Vengeance Essential Clubsounds Vol 2 Link

Classic, synthetic acid lines for retro and hard-hitting tracks. Why Every EDM Producer Needs This Pack

The raw Vengeance samples are already processed, but you should still treat them as raw material, not finished products. Add your own EQ, compression, saturation, and reverb. Layer multiple kicks or snares together to create a unique hybrid sound. This is the difference between sounding like everyone else and sounding like yourself.