Take a 5-second loop of the "Lata Scrape" (tin scrape) from the repack. Load it into a granular synthesizer (like Granulator II or Portal). Set the grain size to extremely small (<50ms) with high spray. The natural harmonics of the 1x10 speaker’s breakup will create a "glitching rain" effect—perfect for building tension before a drop.
Listening to the 1x10 Repack, the difference is immediately noticeable. The original version was arguably a bit "muddy" in the mid-range, with the vocals fighting for space against the distorted synthesizers. The Repack creates space. The kick drum hits harder, and the haunting vocals float eerily above the instrumentation rather than drowning in it. dientes de lata 1x10 repack
The standout track (presumably the "10th" entry) is a slow-burner. It starts with a metallic clanking (a nod to the band's name?) before exploding into a wall of sound. It is hypnotic, abrasive, and strangely danceable. Toothed components made from tin or sheet metal (e
Like any cult tool, the Dientes de Lata 1x10 Repack has generated a small but fervent online community. Reddit threads on r/industrialmusic debate the best transient shapers to use with the "Tin Kick" samples. YouTube tutorials with less than 1,000 views demonstrate how to circuit-bend the repack using Bitwig’s Grid. Technique 2: Granular Texture for Transitions Take a
However, there is controversy. The original creator of Dientes de Lata (a Spanish sound artist known as Ruido Metálico) has publicly stated that the "1x10 Repack" violates the original license, arguing that re-amping the samples through a speaker constitutes derivative work. El Herrante counters that the repack is transformative, akin to a remix.
Regardless of the legal gray area, the repack has become the definitive version. Most new listeners discover Dientes de Lata not through the original 2019 recordings, but through the aggressive, boxy punch of the 1x10 version.