by Native Instruments

Watch: Robot Koch on creating new musical landscapes

In-demand composer, remixer, performer, and producer, Robot Koch provides space-laden sound pack with a collection of one-shot samples and loops for Sounds.com.

The award-winning producer and composer known as Robot Koch has been intrigued with the relationships between space and sound since a young age. Today his compositions continue to explore those relationships, often incorporating both immediate, dry sounds and large, reverberant spaces.

Check out Robot Koch’s ‘Sounds of Sphere’ Sounds.com pack now.

“I’m very particular about how much space there is around the sound, how much space there is in the song, and how much space I give the sounds in relation to each other”, says Koch.

The artist’s engaging sonic creations – which mix electronic and organic elements – have made him an in-demand composer, remixer, performer, and producer, for nearly two decades. He has released several of his own albums, toured extensively across the globe, produced and remixed numerous tracks, and contributed to multiple films and TV shows, including NBC’s ‘The Blacklist’ and ‘How to Get Away with Murder’.

Recently, he has set out in yet another new direction. In collaboration with filmmaker Mickael Le Goff, Koch embarked on an innovative audiovisual project for the Red Bull Music Academy.

Koch’s work with Le Goff has resulted in an immersive planetarium show called Sphere that premiered in Berlin’s Zeiss-Grossplanetarium on October 8th. The full-dome show was designed to transport the audience through space and time using custom projection visuals and atmospheric music, presented in a 3D sound environment.

Sounds.com is offering a new sound pack with a collection of one-shot samples and loops, including sounds drawn from the album version of Sphere – the soundtrack from the planetarium show. The pack meshes futuristic and organic sounds generated with an eclectic array of unique synths, analog effects, orchestral recordings, and other studio tools.

Watch Koch discuss his approach to space and sound, and the genesis of his planetarium show. Then download his sound pack to expand your own sonic landscape.

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