24 Bit - 96 Khz .wav

246 files

3.56 GB

UCS - Universal Category System file names + Soundminer & Basehead Metadata(download)

 

SPARK - Electricity, Reimagined

 

SPARK is SoundMorph’s new high-voltage sound library, created by Jason Cushing with contributions from Bryan Leach and Andrew Pals. A fusion of raw electricity, antique machinery, and early-era recording technology, SPARK delivers a world of charged sonic energy perfect for modern sound design.

Recorded with Tesla coils, vintage electrical instruments, hand-built mechanisms, vintage Edison cylinder players, and rare early-1900s machines, SPARK captures the unpredictable beauty of real electrical discharge and mechanical movement. Every sound was carefully designed, curated, and processed into a premium collection of sparks, arcs, hums, drones, mechanical activation tones, and explosive textures.

From sci-fi weapons to UI electricity, creature power cores to mechanical switches, gritty transitions to cinematic impacts — SPARK gives you a full toolkit of electric and mechanical character grounded in real physical devices.

 

⚡Categories Included

  • Electrical Sparks

  • Tesla Coil Discharges

  • Mechanical Switches

  • Vintage Edison Cylinder FX

  • Early 1900 Mechanical Devices

  • Electricity Drones & Hums

  • Voltage Pops & Arcs

  • Designed Impacts & Textures

Library Information

Sound Categories

-Tesla Coil Discharges

- Electrical Sparks

- Voltage Arcs & Pops

- Electricity Hums, Drones & Power Beds

- Mechanical Switches & Activations

- Antique Machinery Movements

- Vintage Edison Cylinder Textures

- Early 1900s Mechanical Devices

- Designed Electric Impacts

- Charged Transitions & Textures

- Energy Bursts & Power-Up FX

- Electrical UI & Micro-Electric Details

Tech Specs
  • 24 Bit - 96 Khz .wav
  • 246 Sound Files
  • 3.56 GB Size
  • UCS - Universal Category System file names + Soundminer & Basehead Metadata

Behind The Sparks

Step inside the making of SPARK — from Tesla coils and hand-built machines to antique Edison players and early-era mechanical devices. These images capture the raw electrical experiments and unusual recording setups that shaped the library’s sound.