Riot Audio wants your ear to lose track, and that's the whole point. ANARCHIA is a rhythmically aleatoric library for Kontakt Player, built from long off-grid performances whose ragged timing stacks up into something organic.
The articulations span a wide textural range, from soft intermittent single-pitch notes, through octaves, out to scratchy, buzzing, fluttery noise. Keep voices low, say three per layer, and your brain files each sub-voice separately. Crank it to 18 through 24, and that chunking gets overwhelmed, so every pitch reads as one unified mass while the chaos underneath still peeks through.
Under the hood, there are 16 sound sources: piano, electric baritone guitars, Irish flute, and trumpet. A two-layer engine handles independent envelopes, voice counts, and filters. You get 100 presets across evolutions, pads, pulses, and sound design, up to 24 unison voices with stereo spread, five tempo-synced LFOs, synced delay, a three-band EQ, plus mangled tape and lofi crunch. Content weighs 6.16 GB.
A free taster exists. The intro price sits at £79 against £99 for a limited window.
The articulations span a wide textural range, from soft intermittent single-pitch notes, through octaves, out to scratchy, buzzing, fluttery noise. Keep voices low, say three per layer, and your brain files each sub-voice separately. Crank it to 18 through 24, and that chunking gets overwhelmed, so every pitch reads as one unified mass while the chaos underneath still peeks through.
Under the hood, there are 16 sound sources: piano, electric baritone guitars, Irish flute, and trumpet. A two-layer engine handles independent envelopes, voice counts, and filters. You get 100 presets across evolutions, pads, pulses, and sound design, up to 24 unison voices with stereo spread, five tempo-synced LFOs, synced delay, a three-band EQ, plus mangled tape and lofi crunch. Content weighs 6.16 GB.
A free taster exists. The intro price sits at £79 against £99 for a limited window.