Digital Atmospheres

Answer the Question
minimal, data fx texture, suspenseful, slow build

Length: 3:25

Dialogue Friendly: Yes

Pacing:
Slow

Arrangement:
A restrained, slow-building digital underscore driven by a minimal pulse, subdued bass line, and layered data textures. Subtle radio static and abstract chatter create a low-level sense of interior tension without overwhelming dialogue. The track gently crescendos with added depth before dissolving back into signal noise. Ideal for investigative scenes, ethical standoffs, tech-driven narratives, and quiet moments of psychological processing.

© Hannah Rosenberg / 144 Sound


Digital After Dark
Minimal groove, data fx, ambient electronic

Length: 3:25

Dialogue Friendly: Yes

Pacing:
Slow

Arrangement:
A slow electronic underscore supported by digital textures, filtered beeps, and atmospheric signal noise create an, after-hours mood. Minimal yet immersive. Ideal for stylish nightlife scenes, tech environments, quiet seduction with a tech spin, or controlled psychological moments.

© Hannah Rosenberg / 144 Sound


Falling Rain
Prepared piano, interior pulse, atmospheric texture, light forward motion

Length:
With Drums: 2:14
No Drums or Percussion: 2:14

Dialogue Friendly: No

Pacing:
Slow, then quick, then slow

Arrangement:
A minimalist prepared piano piece layered with subtle atmospheric texture and a light rhythmic pulse. Quick, raindrop-like figures introduce forward motion before returning to a softened, unresolved close. Suitable for interior drama, light tension, and reflective narrative moments.

© Hannah Rosenberg / 144 Sound


Slow Orbit
bass clarinet, moody, digital atmosphere, expansive, versatile

Length:
Underscore 1: 2:46
Pulse: 1:20
Pulse, NO Percussion: 1:20

Dialogue Friendly:

Pacing:
Depends on selection, underscore track yes. Pulse tracks, no.

Arrangement:
A spacious digital atmosphere built around drifting bass clarinet, distorted low synth, and electronic textures. The cue opens with a melancholic, suspended tone before gradually gaining momentum as synth layers expand.

© Hannah Rosenberg / 144 Sound