What it sounds like
Organic house grew out of the Burning Man / Tulum / open-air festival circuit in the early-to-mid 2010s. Labels like Crosstown Rebels, All Day I Dream (Lee Burridge), and Saved Records pushed a sound that traded the synthetic precision of techno for live-sounding hand percussion, world-music samples, and chord progressions that feel like the slow build of a sunrise over an open horizon. Bedouin, Damian Lazarus, RY X, Acid Pauli — they all live here.
A bar in and you’ve got it: a soft kick at 118–122 BPM, layered shakers, congas, and tribal hand percussion doing most of the rhythmic work, and chord pads warm enough to feel humid under a vocal hook in some non-English language. The track is long — 8 to 12 minutes is normal — and it builds glacially. Drops aren’t really drops; they’re slow horizons.
The chord moves
Organic house loves i–VI–III–VII in natural minor — same descending-root engine deep house and synthwave use, but voiced with warm Rhodes/marimba/kalimba textures instead of synth pads. Often a single m9 chord sustains for 16 or 32 bars with subtle filter movement as the only harmonic event.
Pair --chord minor9 with a slow --pattern pad and let the percussion carry the energy.
The groove
4-on-the-floor at 118–122 BPM, but the kick is soft — more thump than punch, often with a deep sub layer. The clap on 2 and 4 is replaced or supplemented by hand percussion: tablas, congas, shakers, woodblocks. Layer 4-6 percussion elements for that “live band” feel.
The bass plays simple offbeat eighth notes following the chord roots. Nothing flashy — the percussion is the rhythmic interest.
The sounds
- Chord pad: warm Rhodes or marimba (sampled). Long release, gentle chorus, hall reverb. Sidechained gently.
- Bass: deep sub + soft mid-bass on offbeats. Sometimes a real upright sample.
- Percussion: live-sounding tabla, conga, shaker, woodblock layers. Stereo-spread for width.
- Vocal: chopped non-English vocal sample — Spanish, Arabic, African languages, Romance languages. Pitched and looped.
- Atmospheres: field recordings (wind, water, birds), kalimba arpeggios, slow synth swells. Add depth without crowding.
- Drums: 909 kick low-passed for warmth. Open hat on offbeats. Brushed hi-hat samples for texture.
Production tells
Want it modern? Cleaner low end, tighter percussion mix, more space. Modern organic house has more clarity than its first wave.
Want it 2017-All-Day-I-Dream-vintage? Lots of reverb, lots of width, master at -14 LUFS so it breathes. Add a tape saturator for warmth. Layer multiple takes of live percussion (or sample real performances) for the human feel.
Am9 → Fmaj9 → Cmaj7 → G
Click to hear it.
Listen to
Three records that show the style at full strength. Read them as listening pointers, not templates to copy.
Set the Controls For The Heart of the Sun
Bedouin
listen ↗
Mst
Acid Pauli
listen ↗
Tribe
Lee Burridge
listen ↗
Six recipes
Six ways to cook Organic house.
One starter recipe, three variations that each take the style in a different direction, one sectioned recipe, and one curated Live handoff recipe. Each one cooks from a Markdown recipe — edit it before the MIDI lands in your DAW.
Starter
Desert Pedal Call
An organic-house first cook with modal clave-like chords, pedal bass, slow wide pads, percussion-pulse drums, and sparse call-response gestures.
Study: Bedouin, “Set The Controls for the Heart of the Sun” (2016). Use the reference for spacious modal atmosphere and percussion balance, not for phrase or melody copying.
python jamburgr.py --config configs/recipes/organic_house/organic_house_desert_pedal_call.md Variation
Cumbia Drift Stabs
A warmer tresillo-accented lane with walking minor bass hints, fifth-drone support, and sparse acoustic-color calls.
Study: Nicola Cruz, “Cumbia del Olvido” (2015). Use the reference for organic rhythm influence and acoustic color, not for melody, rhythm, or sample copying.
python jamburgr.py --config configs/recipes/organic_house/organic_house_cumbia_drift_stabs.md Variation
Plucked Call Garden
A brighter plucked-call lane with offbeat stabs, pedal bass, slow-wide support, and medium sparse call-response movement.
Study: Lee Burridge, “Lingala” (2017). Use the reference for gentle lift and outdoor-room pacing, not for phrase or hook copying.
python jamburgr.py --config configs/recipes/organic_house/organic_house_plucked_call_garden.md Variation
Sunrise Pad Bloom
A softer slow-attack sketch with pedal bass, evolving inversions, and tiny motifs for intro or breakdown atmosphere.
Study: Satori, “Umama” (2016). Use the reference for atmosphere, patience, and texture movement, not for phrase or vocal copying.
python jamburgr.py --config configs/recipes/organic_house/organic_house_sunrise_pad_bloom.md Sectioned
Percussion-First Sunrise Sketch
A full-song organic-house sketch with percussion-led sections, late modal harmony, atmospheric breakdowns, and section MIDI clips.
Study: Acid Pauli, “Nana” (2017). Use the reference for long-form texture and patient section pacing, not for phrase or melodic copying.
python jamburgr.py --config configs/recipes/organic_house/organic_house_percussion_first_sunrise_sketch.md Live handoff
Live Organic Session
An organic-house DAW handoff with modal sound cards, section MIDI files, and licensed sample-search prompts for percussion, texture, and instrument loops.
Study: Stavroz, “The Finishing” (2015). Use the reference for acoustic color, arrangement patience, and texture balance, not for phrase or motif copying.
python jamburgr.py --config configs/recipes/organic_house/organic_house_bridge_ready_organic_session.md Ready when you are
Cook a Organic house pack.
Drop this in your terminal and you'll have a Standard MIDI pack in a folder, ready to drag into Live. Edit anything, swap any sound, throw out what doesn't work.
python jamburgr.py --key "A minor" --style organic_house --progression i,VI,III,VII --pattern pad --output-mode pack --out ./jams/organic-house