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Last month, Giegling revealed details for Prince Of Denmark's, a vinyl box-set on the sub-label Forum with the eyebrow-raising price of €100. As with all their records, there was no press release, no official announcement—the info simply appeared on giegling.net , was quickly noticed and, riding its own natural momentum, disseminated across the internet. Within a few weeks, before anyone had heard it (there were no audio samples online), the first pressing had sold out.Other labels would be forgiven for thinking: how do they get away with this shit? While everyone else falls over themselves in an effort to be heard—hiring publicists, devising marketing strategies, maintaining a social media presence—Giegling hang back, let people come to them, and still manage to be the most fetishized electronic label out there. The explanation, of course, is simple. They release music that people not only love but truly connect with on a personal level, a rare achievement in club music.After a relatively quiet 2015, Giegling and its related labels cranked into high gear this year. Aside from, there were 12-inches from Leafar Legov and Chicago's Olin, remix EPs featuring Huerco S., Lawrence and others, a compilation called, plus two records from Prince Of Denmark's other aliases, DJ Metatron's 2 Tha Sky and the sixth EP from Traumprinz. Observing the fervour surrounding those releases, you see the elusive power that makes them such a great label: in their hands, the release of a vinyl record becomes a massive event.