Turns out the secret to Bentley’s most iconic noise wasn’t horsepower. It was rhythm.
Engineers digging through Bentley’s back catalogue — supercharged 1930s beasts, the fabled 6¾-litre V8, that thunderous W12 — kept landing on one truth: a Bentley accelerating should feel like an orchestra tuning up in your chest.
So when it came to giving the new electric Torcal a voice, they didn’t chase engine noise. They chased emotion.
The V8 got the studio treatment first, recorded and picked apart until the team realised tone wasn’t the magic ingredient — cadence was.
Cue a genuinely odd experiment: parabolic speakers, a V8 on one side, a live drummer on the other, engineers pacing between them. The overlap in energy was uncanny.
Even engines, it turns out, stumble slightly — like a drummer’s imperfect fills, those tiny irregularities feel human.
From that discovery came “Bentley Dynamic Symphony,” composed by professional musicians using drums, viola and bass guitar.
It’s not mimicking a V8. It’s channelling one — responsive, expressive, and entirely new.
















