{"product_id":"maxime-denuc_nachthorn_2023_dif","title":"Nachthorn","description":"\"The Brussels-based electronic producer returns with an album composed on a MIDI organ, adding a clerical touch to music that rocks Sunday mornings far more than a trip to church. You might say church and electronic music aren't necessarily terms that go hand in hand. That's more or less true. If we look at recent years, we've seen more and more bridges being built between the house of the Lord and non-conformist, computer-produced music. Religious samples, concerts in churches, instruments borrowed from the hallowed register – anything goes to draw inspiration from elsewhere, and perhaps even from above, when producing. This is the gamble taken by Maxime Denuc, a Brussels-based electronic music producer and composer. His latest album, Nachthorn, released on the Vlek label, is entirely composed on a MIDI electronic organ. This record, recorded on the grand organ of St. Antonius Church in Düsseldorf, has the particularity of using the instrument in a different way. Equipped with a system developed by the German company Sinua, which allows all its keyboards and timbres to be controlled via a computer, the organ is transformed into a powerful synthesizer that extensively prolongs notes and exaggerates the sound to give it more body, more reverberation. Like a form of divine intervention, a filter from heaven.\" Matéo Vigné, La Vague Parallèle.","brand":"Maxime Denuc","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55306998055256,"sku":null,"price":20230717.0,"currency_code":"EUR","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0898\/4943\/0360\/files\/5419980294708.jpg?v=1765823645","url":"https:\/\/vinyles.com\/en\/products\/maxime-denuc_nachthorn_2023_dif","provider":"Vinyles.com","version":"1.0","type":"link"}