Joris Voorn
Grand Palais in Paris, France for Cercle
Joris Voorn playing beneath the ornate glass roof of the Grand Palais is a visual metaphor we can all get behind: classic beauty meeting cutting-edge sound. This is music for awe, for when you want your techno to feel architectural and your emotions to feel grand. The vibe is undeniably epic, a collision of 19th-century grandeur and 21st-century pulse that only Cercle and Voorn could pull off with such grace. On a technical level, this is a majestic, expertly paced journey through techno and progressive house, locked into a steady, driving 127.7 BPM.
The harmonic framework is built around the bright, anthemic key of 12A, reinforced by thoughtful modulations to 3B and 6B that introduce warmer, deeper, and more melanchonic shades. With a near-perfect balance between low-end thrust (0.46) and mid-range melody (0.44), the sound is both physically powerful and richly detailed, allowing Voorn's signature melodic sensibilities to shine without ever sacrificing dancefloor impact. His mixing is seamless and narrative, often blending three or four tracks at once to create dense, ever-evolving tapestries of sound. The crate digging here is sublime, showcasing Voorn's peerless taste across decades and styles.
Opening with Nils Frahm's 'The Roughest Trade' is a bold, ambient statement that immediately commands attention. Barker's 'Look How Hard I've Tried' is a masterclass in melancholic, rolling techno, while the Mousse T remix of Shakedown's 'At Night' is a flawless injection of disco-tinged house joy. Recondite's 'Rufus' provides a moment of deep, hypnotic minimalism, and his own 'District Seven' is a timeless peak-time anthem. The journey is a perfect arc: it begins in the contemplative ambient of Nils Frahm, ascends through melodic techno peaks and house-infused grooves, and finds a beautiful, organic resolution in Tim Green's remix of Rodriguez Jr.'s 'Baobab', a set that feels both monumental and intimately human.