The name Dejavu implies "already seen." In the context of worship synthesis, this is a compliment. Worship leaders hate surprises. They need the familiar sound of a Juno-60 through a Strymon BigSky reverb.
For a decade, that sound lived in new wave and Italo disco. Then, in the early 2010s, something strange happened. Producers in Nashville and Atlanta discovered that the Juno’s infamous "chorus" button—which adds a watery, wide stereo field—was the secret to "Heavenly ambience." The gritty, slightly unstable DCOs (Digitally Controlled Oscillators) created a warmth that felt less like a machine and more like a breathing congregation. That Worship Sound Dejavu Vol 1 -TAL-U-NO-LX Pr...
The name Dejavu implies "already seen." In the context of worship synthesis, this is a compliment. Worship leaders hate surprises. They need the familiar sound of a Juno-60 through a Strymon BigSky reverb.
For a decade, that sound lived in new wave and Italo disco. Then, in the early 2010s, something strange happened. Producers in Nashville and Atlanta discovered that the Juno’s infamous "chorus" button—which adds a watery, wide stereo field—was the secret to "Heavenly ambience." The gritty, slightly unstable DCOs (Digitally Controlled Oscillators) created a warmth that felt less like a machine and more like a breathing congregation.