Chris Lorenzo - Appetite (Extended) (Ableton Stencil - Tech House)
Ableton Live Stencil: “Appetite (Extended)” – Chris Lorenzo
(Structural arrangement only, no audio included)
Compatible with Ableton 12.3 and above
Learn from it, write to it, or make it your own.
This stencil is a complete arrangement breakdown designed for producers to study, learn from, and produce into themselves. The structure is already mapped out so you skip the empty session and start creating immediately. You write all drums, bass, instruments, vocals, and transitions yourself.
Built from the original 132 BPM arrangement (tempo adjustable), the project shows exactly where sections begin and end, how ideas repeat, and when elements enter or drop out. The session contains the full structural layout so you can study how the track is built, then fill it in with your own sounds while producing.
This stencil highlights a modern tech house structure built around attitude-driven vocals, punchy low-end, and groove-first drop design. The arrangement focuses on keeping energy high while introducing just enough variation to avoid repetition.
The vocal is used as a rhythmic tool as much as a melodic one chopped, repeated, and strategically placed to drive momentum and create memorable moments throughout the track. Instead of long breakdowns, the structure keeps things moving with tight transitions and quick energy resets.
The breakdown sections pull back just enough to create contrast, often focusing on drums, vocal elements, or stripped-back grooves before reintroducing the full drop impact. This controlled use of space makes each drop feel intentional and hard-hitting.
As the track progresses, subtle variations in bass, drums, and vocal placement keep the groove evolving without losing its core identity. Rather than over complicating the arrangement, the focus stays on bounce, rhythm, and attitude.
Study how the arrangement balances repetition with small but effective changes, allowing the track to stay engaging while remaining club-focused and easy to follow for DJs and listeners alike.
If you want to write tracks that feel energetic, modern, and built for the dancefloor, this is a strong structure to learn from.
The original track sits at 132 BPM and fits within the tech house lane, but the structure can be applied across house, bass house, and minimal styles depending on your sound selection.
🎯 What’s Inside
✅ Full Arrangement Map
A complete visual breakdown of the full extended structure originally written at 132 BPM.
✅ Fully Organized Project
Color coded, labeled, and session ready so structure and repetition are easy to read while studying or producing.
✅ Key Mapped Frequency Check Rack
Quick isolation of lows, mids, highs, mono, and stereo for reference while working.
✅ Two Key Mapped Reference Channels
Fast A B comparison with your own reference tracks.
LISTEN TO THE ORIGINAL TRACK BEHIND THIS STENCIL
PROJECT BREAKDOWN
FEATURES
Key-Mapped Frequency
Check Rack
Clean up your mix fast with a visual EQ guide
Melody and
Counterpoint Placement
See how the emotion builds
Pre-Programmed MIDI
(Basic Pulse)
Kick, snare, and hats mapped for rhythm
Two Key-Mapped
Reference Channels
A/B your version with the original structure
Clearly Labeled
Automation Lanes
Filters, transitions, and FX laid out
Vocal-Friendly Flow &
Arrangement
Spacious structure ideal for writing and recording
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Reference 1 - [
Reference 2 - ]
Additional reference tools -
On both the master channel and the reference group, there is an Ableton FX rack that allows you to solo high, mid, and low frequencies as well as check your side and mono frequencies. These are also mapped to key commands.
Mono - M (Capital M)
Solo Lows - ,
Solo Mids - .
Solo Highs - /
Solo Sides - ;