The tradition of French organ music is so strong and so venerable that there's a tendency among listeners to choose performances by players who come out of that tradition. That may be justifiable, but for a state-of-the-art set of Maurice Duruflé's organ music, which all fits on a single CD, this one merits strong consideration. Organist Thomas Trotter plays the recently (2016) restored organ at King's College Chapel, Cambridge, and it fits Duruflé well both in general terms and in specific instances. Its power is quiet, without the slashing tones of some older cathedral organs, and it corresponds to the essentially lyrical rather than the monumental quality of Duruflé's music. Yet Trotter, who began his career as an organ scholar at King's, is given the ability to be brilliant when he needs to be. A good place to begin sampling the organ's wonders, and Trotter's exploitation of them, is with the Choral varié finale of the Prelude, Adagio, et Choral Varié sur le Thème du "Veni Creator," Op. 4, where a kaleidoscope of colors appears over the course of the movement. Superb engineering from Chandos is another big draw; one would expect no less from the label at the King's College chapel, but this release will keep audiophiles exploring it for some time. A highly satisfying Duruflé release, even in the face of strong French competition.