I am happy to inform everyone that completed my new sample sets.
Organ from Zenta (Serbia) (29/3+P).
Zenta (Senta) is a town in the North Banat District of the autonomous province of Vojvodina, Serbia. The Heart of Jesus Parish Church was built in 1895 in Neo-Gothic style. The one-manual and 12-stops organ built by the
Rieger organ factory in 1896. As a result of improper repairs, the organ became almost unusable by the 1990s.
The parish received a grant from the Austrian town of Feldbach in 2011. This donation was a
Dreher & Flamm organ with 3 manuals and 34 registers, built in 1941. The parish decided to combine the two organs. László Varga organ builder did this work and the new organ was dedicated in 2012. These three manual and 41 stops organs are the largest organ in Vojvodina.
The small chorus caused problems with the placement of the large organ and the sound of the pedal did not prevail. Therefore, the organ had to be partially rebuilt. This work was done by Szabolcs Bartis, a Transylvanian organ builder in 2018.
I made the recording in may and juny in 2019. The licenced was obtained by Zoltán Borbély organist and cantor of the parish. Special thanks for his advice and much help.
The sample sets are available in wave format 48kHz/24bit, stereo, multiple loops (1-12) and multiple releases (3 levels). Equal, a=440 Hz. The reverb 2.5 s, reflects the original acoustics of the church. Hauptwerk v4.2 and higher supported for the Organ Definition Files.
The sample sets made in several forms.1. Semidry version (stereo recording front of the organ)
2. Wet version (stereo recording space of the church)
3. Surround version (2 pairs of stereo recording up close (near) and at a distance (far).
In the surround version you can change freely the ratio of sound volumen of near and far recording.
ScreenshotsAudio demos More audio demos More informationAcknowledgements:The following friends helped me to make and publish the sample set (in alphabetical order): Dominique Dantand, Gérard Lefranc, Nagy István, Jean-Pierre Silvestre and Adrian Wheal. If something's done well, it's thanks to them. Thank you for their work
Best regards, Augustine