How to Make Ambient Music with the Elektron Digitakt – Artist Workflow with Amiva
Discover how ambient artist Amiva transforms the Elektron Digitakt into a generative ambient machine—no sequencer, just one pattern, infinite textures. Watch the full podcast and learn his workflow.
A single pattern, infinite textures: Discovering generative ambient with the Digitakt
Introduction
What happens when you hand a “drum machine” to an ambient artist? In this episode of Single Chain Stories, ambient producer Amiva (aka Alex) reveals a deeply personal, generative approach to working with the Elektron Digitakt. Hosted by Miles Kundra and Mordio, the conversation dives into workflows that blur the line between live performance and meditative soundscaping. If you think the Digitakt is just a beatbox, prepare to have your mind opened.
From Berlin Techno to Spanish Mountains
After years in Berlin’s club scene, Alex moved to rural Spain, seeking stillness—and his music followed. The Digitakt, originally intended as a drum machine, became his ambient canvas. Instead of sequencing drums, he triggers long-decay samples manually, allowing them to evolve in real time.
“My body just asked me for the opposite of the city… I needed to lower the volume and learn how to listen again.”
Redefining the Digitakt: No Sequencer, All Soul
Alex’s method is deceptively simple: no sequencer, just one pattern. Each of the Digitakt’s eight tracks is triggered individually, with infinite decay, transforming the box into a tactile soundscape generator. Through delicate pitch shifts, filters, and real-time effects, he creates rich ambient layers with emotional depth.
Key Tips from Alex’s Workflow:
- Use long samples like field recordings, textures, or piano motifs.
- Set Decay to INF so each triggered sample loops endlessly.
- Route audio only through the reverb/delay, skipping the dry output for lush atmospheres.
- Use Slice Mode with 64 slices on a short sample for a granular-style effect.
- Use Function + Yes to store a live state, then Function + No to recall it instantly—ideal for live manipulation.
- Pitch, filter, and resample manually—embrace imperfections and happy accidents.
A Jammer’s Playground: More Than Just Loops
Both Mordio and Miles shared how the Digitakt complements their setups—whether using it for gritty techno layers or as a percussion engine alongside Eurorack. One standout feature they praised: per-step sample locking and real-time FX performance, allowing the Digitakt to become a fully generative, expressive instrument.
Why This Matters for Ambient Producers
This episode doesn’t just highlight gear tricks—it champions a mindset. Alex proves that limitations fuel creativity. His work transforms a device marketed as a drum machine into an ambient powerhouse. For artists chasing depth, nuance, and improvisation, this approach is pure gold.
Try It Yourself
Whether you’re deep into modular, just getting started with hardware, or searching for a DAWless live setup—the Digitakt’s flexibility is unmatched. Challenge yourself: load it with textures, turn off the sequencer, and play it like an instrument.




