Opening on what would be his 85th birthday, the Moogseum commemorates the inventor who’s been a staple of pop music from the 1960s to today. Visiting Asheville, North Carolina, in December, I walked ...
The Moog recently turned 60. The first mass-produced and commercially available synthesiser single-handedly brought electronic music into the mainstream, and with everyone from The Beatles to Michael ...
Robert Moog, who died Sunday at 71, was an electronics tinker who invented and named the Moog synthesizer, the touchstone for a revolution in sound production that has reached every corner of music.
Herb Deutsch, the composer and professor who co-created the Moog synthesizer alongside Bob Moog, died on Friday (12/9) at age 90. Stereogum notes the news was shared via Moog, who wrote, “Herb’s ...
Composer, conductor and electronic music pioneer Gershon Kingsley, who wrote the top 10 hit "Popcorn" and played a pivotal role in popularizing the synthesizer sound, died Tuesday in New York. He was ...
Sound production has been around for hundreds of years, and people have worked to perfect sound production since the invention of electricity. One pioneer in the industry was engineer Robert Moog, who ...
Herb Deutsch, who invented the Moog synthesizer alongside namesake Bob Moog, has died at 90. The musical instrument company announced his passing over the weekend, writing in a statement: “As a ...
This deep dive into a classic Beatles song reveals 4 synth parts that we’d never even noticed before
He concludes that there are actually four synth parts, all of which appear to have been created on The Beatles’ Moog Modular ...
Today is Robert Moog’s birthday, and while you may not know his name or who he is, you almost certainly know of his invention – the Moog Synthesizer. Moog (pronounced MOHG), born in New York City on ...
Anyone who has ever run their fingers over the keys of a synthesizer, or danced to pounding electronic music in a nightclub, owes a debt to Robert Moog. Moog, one of the early pioneers in electronic ...
A sound engineer said one of The Beatles‘ songs “got close to a breaking point.” Subsequently, he said George Harrison incorporated “intense” instrumentation into the song. Notably, the tune in ...
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