Vol. 3 !full!: Sounds Of Kshmr
If I must find flaws, two stand out. First, the bass house and techno sections feel slightly tacked on compared to the cinematic core. The “Saw Bass” loops are functional but not revolutionary. Second, the lack of Serum presets (the pack focuses heavily on WAV loops and one-shots, with some presets for Massive X and Sylenth1) feels like a missed opportunity. In an era of hybrid synthesis, users want to tweak the source.
The new “Songstarter” kits (10 full construction kits with stems, MIDI, and presets) are worth discussing separately. On one hand, they are staggeringly well-produced. Kit #4, “Ghost Colony,” is a masterclass in tension—starting with a solo cello loop, building into a psytrance bassline, and exploding into a big room drop. For producers experiencing creative block, these are instant fuel. On the other hand, the risk is obvious: because KSHMR’s sound is so distinctive, using these loops verbatim will make you sound like a carbon copy. The wise producer will deconstruct these kits, reverse the reverb tails, pitch the brass down an octave, and use the arrangement as a template rather than a final product. sounds of kshmr vol. 3
Sounds of KSHMR Vol. 3 is not a sample pack; it is a cultural artifact. It captures a specific moment in electronic music where the boundaries between EDM, world music, and film score have dissolved entirely. KSHMR has done more than just curate sounds—he has invited you into his creative subconscious. Yes, you will recognize his fingerprints all over it. But rather than feeling derivative, it feels like a master offering you his palette. If you want to make music that feels larger than life, that swells with drama and crashes with catharsis, buy this pack. Just be prepared to spend hours lost in its desert canyons. If I must find flaws, two stand out
At nearly 2.5 GB of 24-bit WAV content, Vol. 3 is a beast. Organized with KSHMR’s signature meticulousness (a blessing for workflow), the pack is divided into intuitive folders: Drum Hits, Loops (full stems), MIDI, One-Shots, and a stunning new addition—the “Songstarter” kits. The ADSR integration is seamless, allowing for instant previewing, but the true value lies in the lack of filler. Every single sound feels intentional. Second, the lack of Serum presets (the pack