top of page

news

Search
Writer's picturehandlannamogenlili

Vengeance Essential Deep House Vol 1



Join the darkside! This new sample collection from the house of Vengeance is aimed solely at the club music genres of Dub/Minimal House & Techno/TechHouse. Well known Techno producers of the first generation came together to produce this gigantic Sample Pack: Pascal Feos, Gabriel Le Mar, Frank Leicher & D.Diggler (aka Andreas Mügge) have opened their well-guarded sound archives and demonstrate with more than 1500 samples the way to go in any club. "Freakz On Beatz" is the ultimate library for every producer of deep club music - whether you are a beginner or an expert! All sounds are clearly organized into categories and tempo (126BPM) and further separated into Loops and Oneshots. All Loops run 100% tight, are immediately applicable, and leave plenty of room for your own customizing or editing.




Vengeance essential deep house vol 1



Freakz on Beatz Volume 2 has the bone-dry minimal sounds, deep kicks, crazy synths, and cool basslines with the warm analog sound characteristics you are looking for. Techno pioneers Pascal Feos, Andreas Mugge, Gabriel Le Mar and Frank Leicher contribute samples that show off the minimal, dub, techno and tech-house skills they are so well known for! This time, by popular request, more oneshots, kicks, minimal percussion, claps, bass, and synths. We also have tons of drum loops, bass loops, synth, arps & chordloops, and FX already worked out in detail, just waiting to be discovered! Perfect for all your productions - especially for electro, house and trance genres.


In this house we met a widow with a thirteen-year-old daughter. Hauptmann found the child very striking. She had beautiful, soft, golden-blond hair, deep-set eyes and a very delicate, pale complexion. I learned later that he sent her occasional gifts. And when I read "Hannele" I could not rid myself of the thought that the vision of this child from Reichenbach must have haunted him when he created this drama.


Were we to relate all the military events transmitted to us by contemporary and authentic historians, it would be easy to swell our accounts of this reign into a large volume: But those incidents, so little memorable in themselves, and so confused both in time and place, could afford neither instruction nor entertainment to the reader. It suffices to say, that the war was spread into every quarter; and that those turbulent barons, who had already shaken off, in a great measure, the restraint of government, having now obtained the pretence of a public cause, carried on their devastations with redoubled fury, exercised implacable vengeance on each other, and set no bounds to their oppressions over the people. The castles of the nobility were become receptacles of licensed robbers, who, sallying forth day and night, committed spoil on the open country, on the villages, and even on the cities; put the captives to torture, in order to make them reveal their treasures; sold their persons to slavery; and set fire to their houses, after they had pillaged them of everything valuable. The fierceness of their disposition, leading them to commit wanton destruction, frustrated their rapacity of its purpose; and the property and persons even of the ecclesiastics, generally so much revered, were at last, from necessity, exposed to the same outrage, which had laid waste the rest of the kingdom. The land was left untilled; the instruments of husbandry were destroyed or abandoned; and a grievous famine, the natural result of those disorders, affected equally both parties, and reduced the spoilers, as well as the defenceless people, to the most extreme want and indigence.


Becket, when he observed, that he might hope for support in an opposition, expressed the deepest sorrow for his compliance; and endeavoured to engage all the other bishops in a confederacy to adhere to their common rights, and to the ecclesiastical privileges, in which he represented the interest and honour of God to be so deeply concerned. He redoubled his austerities in order to punish himself for his criminal assent to the constitutions of Clarendon: He proportioned his discipline to the enormity of his supposed offence: And he refused to exercise any part of his archiepiscopal function, till he should receive absolution from the pope, which was readily granted him. Henry, informed of his present dispositions, resolved to take vengeance for this refractory behaviour; and he attempted to crush him, by means of that very power which Becket made such merit in supporting. He applied to the pope, that he should grant the commission of legate in his dominions to the archbishop of York; but Alexander, as politic as he, though he granted the commission, annexed a clause, that it should not impower the legate to execute any act in prejudice of the archbishop of Canterbury[46]: And the king, finding how fruitless such an authority would prove, sent back the commission by the same messenger that brought it[47]. 2ff7e9595c


0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Comentarios


bottom of page