The organ in All Saints Church, Tooting is considered to be one of the finest examples of Harrison & Harrisons work.
Built in 1906 and voiced by the great Arthur Harrison - surely the first celebrity sound-designer - it is particularly notable for its delicate and quiet registers; as well as the lowest bass we have ever heard.
Tonally unaltered since it was installed in the church over 100 years ago, it features 41 stops, not including couplings. We have sampled 25 of these in full, covering every note.
Much more detail about the organ can be found on this dedicated website
The main control panel. Build a sound from up to 25 stops. Two mic arrays allow to you mix your sound with precision.
All Saints Organ can be taken further than a conventional organ sound if you desire. Each of the four departments can be treated like a synth oscillator, with envelopes, LFOs and filters, allowing you to create evolving pad sounds within the real church acoustic.
All Saints Organ features a comprehensive effects page, with a configurable insert chain featuring Replika, Phasis and other cutting-edge NI effects. The Space Reverb module features 8 All Saints impulse responses captured through the mics during the All Saints Choir recording session.
James Thompson from Soniccouture gives a walkthrough tour of the All Saints Organ instrument and features.
All Saints, Tooting, London | August 2018
All Saints, Tooting, London | August 2018
All Saints, Tooting, London | August 2018
All Saints, Tooting, London | August 2018
All Saints, Tooting, London | August 2018
All Saints, Tooting, London | August 2018
All Saints, Tooting, London | August 2018
This is a Kontakt Player instrument. This means that you do not need to own the full version of NI Kontakt to use it. It will run as a plug-in instrument in any VST/AU/RTAS/AAX/WASAPI,compatible host program or DAW eg: Cubase, Logic, Ableton Live, DP, Reaper, Pro-Tools. No extra purchase necessary.
Requires KONTAKT 6 or KONTAKT 6 PLAYER version 6.2 or later
A 32 voice choir recorded in the famous All Saints church, London.