Rarely discounted and currently at its lowest tracked price - a genuinely good time to buy.
About
Product Overview
Loot Audio's Antique Metal Percussion (AMP) is a Kontakt library that samples percussion from decommissioned military hardware and salvaged domestic artifacts, including a WWII ammunition box, a period copper fire extinguisher, and various household metal items. The sonic palette sits squarely in the industrial and contemporary classical space, offering textures that fall between the controlled metallics of pitched percussion and the unpredictable resonance of found objects.
The library includes 42 patches derived from over 330 samples, each instrument recorded with four round robins to minimize repetition during extended performances. The approach is straightforward but practical: each source material receives individual processing through a GUI that addresses the parameters producers actually adjust. Convolution reverb with selectable impulse responses, pitch transposition, and independent attack and release envelopes cover the basics, while three-band EQ control provides fundamental tonal shaping without overwhelming complexity.
The collection excels for soundtrack work, ambient composition, and experimental music production where unconventional percussion sources enhance authenticity. The WWII-era hardware carries inherent dramatic weight, while the civilian artifacts provide more accessible timbral variety. The inclusion of FX pads, reversals, and scrapes expands sonic possibilities beyond percussion into textural territory.
AMP occupies an interesting niche. It lacks the comprehensive scripting of larger orchestral libraries but compensates with curated source material and transparent interface design. For producers seeking distinctive metallic percussion without deep sound design effort, this represents genuine utility. The samples themselves carry character that digital synthesis or generic metal libraries simply cannot replicate, making it a legitimate tool for adding specificity to compositions rather than a novelty.