Today's a sad day for electronic music

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8 comments, last by Nemesis2k2 18 years, 9 months ago
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050822/ap_on_en_mu/obit_moog Synthesizer Innovater Robert A. Moog died
Quote:RALEIGH, N.C. - Robert A. Moog, whose self-named synthesizers turned electric currents into sound, revolutionizing music in the 1960s and opening the wave that became electronica, has died. He was 71. ADVERTISEMENT Moog died Sunday at his home in Asheville, according to his company's Web site. An inoperable brain tumor had been detected in April. A childhood interest in the theremin, one of the first electronic musical instruments, would lead Moog to a create a career and business that tied the name Moog as tightly to synthesizers as the name Les Paul is to electric guitars. Despite traveling in circles that included jet-setting rockers, he always considered himself a technician. "I'm an engineer. I see myself as a toolmaker and the musicians are my customers," he said in 2000. "They use the tools." As a Ph.D. student in engineering physics at Cornell University, Moog — rhymes with vogue — in 1964 developed his first voltage-controlled synthesizer modules with composer Herb Deutsch. By the end of that year, R.A. Moog Co. marketed the first commercial modular synthesizer. The instrument allowed musicians, first in a studio and later on stage, to generate a range of sounds that could mimic nature or seem otherworldly by flipping a switch, twisting a dial, or sliding a knob. Other synthesizers were already on the market in 1964, but Moog's stood out for being small, light and versatile. The arrival of the synthesizer came as just as the Beatles and other musicians started seeking ways to fuse psychedelic-drug experiences with their art. The Beatles used a Moog synthesizer on their 1969 album "Abbey Road"; a Moog was used to create an eerie sound on the soundtrack to the 1971 film "A Clockwork Orange." Keyboardist Walter (later Wendy) Carlos demonstrated the range of Moog's synthesizer by recording the hit album "Switched-On Bach" in 1968 using only the new instrument instead of an orchestra. Among the other classics using a Moog: the Who's "Won't Get Fooled Again," and Stevie Wonder's urban epic "Livin' for the City." "Suddenly, there was a whole group of people in the world looking for a new sound in music, and it picked up very quickly," said Deutsch, the Hofstra University emeritus music professor who helped develop the Moog prototype. "The Moog came at the right time," he said Monday. The popularity of the synthesizer and the success of the company named for Moog took off in rock as extended keyboard solos in songs by Manfred Mann, Yes and Pink Floyd became part of the progressive sound of the 1970s. "The sound defined progressive music as we know it," said Keith Emerson, keyboardist for the rock band Emerson, Lake and Palmer. Along with rock, synthesizers developed since Moog's breakthrough helped inspire elements of 1970s funk, hip-hop, and techno. Charles Carlini, a New York City concert promoter, staged Moogfest in May 2004 to mark a half-century since Moog founded his first company while still in college. Emerson, Rick Wakeman of Yes, and Bernie Worrell of Parliament/Funkadelic were among those who played, and a second Moogfest was held a year later. Moog had "this absent-minded professorial way about him," Carlini said. "He's like an Einstein of music," Carlini said. "He sees it like, there's a thought, an idea in the air, and it passes through him. Passing through him, he's able to build these instruments." "A lot of people today don't realize what this man brought to the masses," Carlini said. "He brought electronic music to the masses and changed the way we hear music." But the now-pervasive synthesizer's ability to mimic strings, horns, and percussion has also threatened some musicians. In 2004, musicians extracted a promise from the Opera Company of Brooklyn to never again use an advanced kind of synthesizer, called a virtual orchestra machine, in future productions. A deliberate man with brushed-back white hair and a breast pocket packed with pens, Moog drove an aging Toyota painted with a snail, vines and a fish blowing bubbles. "When I drive that thing around, people smile at me," he said. "I really feel I'm enhancing the environment." He spent the early 1990s as a research professor of music at the University of North Carolina at Asheville before turning full-time to running his new instrument business, which was renamed Moog Music in 2002. The roster of customers includes Nine Inch Nails, Pearl Jam, Beck, Phish, Sonic Youth and Widespread Panic. Moog is survived by his wife, Ileana; two daughters, a son, a stepdaughter, and his former wife, Shireleigh Moog. A public memorial is scheduled for Wednesday in Asheville. ___ Associated Press writer Emery P. Dalesio in Raleigh contributed to this report.
I just thought it'd be appropriate to recognize him here for his accomplishments and his lasting legacy on electronic music.
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I personally hold the opinion that synthesizers and digital signal processing are the worst things that happened to music in its entire history. Still, one has to respect his talent and his innovations, if merely for their tremendous influence.
Quote:Original post by CoffeeMug
I personally hold the opinion that synthesizers and digital signal processing are the worst things that happened to music in its entire history. Still, one has to respect his talent and his innovations, if merely for their tremendous influence.


Actually, used properly, they can produce INCREDIBLE music.
With love, AnonymousPosterChild
Hear ^ that, CoffeeMug? Your opinion is WRONG!
Quote:Original post by CoffeeMug
I personally hold the opinion that synthesizers and digital signal processing are the worst things that happened to music in its entire history.

Some wag may have written Harry Potter but that doesn't mean Shakespear ceases to exist. The existance of new techniques doesn't invalidate the old, at the very worst it simply exists alongside them.
Coffeemug:

The advent of synthesizers, samplers, sequencers and DSP has done more for unintelligible, atonal "Art Music" since impressionism pissed off the world:)

Turn off Q101's All Night Dance Club and listen to some Philip Glass, or paul lansky. Then truly appreciate the blight that electronic music has laid upon us.

God bless the TB303 anyway tho. Best squidgy little sound anyone ever invented.

The Beatles used Moog synths on Abbey Road. Listen to Maxwell's Silver Hammer, you can hear it.
Quote:Original post by CoffeeMug
I personally hold the opinion that synthesizers and digital signal processing are the worst things that happened to music in its entire history. Still, one has to respect his talent and his innovations, if merely for their tremendous influence.


I totally disagree here, they're the best thing that happened to music, they can produce fantastic sounds that help make music greater than ever.
Quote:Original post by CoffeeMug
I personally hold the opinion that synthesizers and digital signal processing are the worst things that happened to music in its entire history. Still, one has to respect his talent and his innovations, if merely for their tremendous influence.


Oh please. Tell that to the late, great Delia Derbyshire and the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. These people were pioneering early forms of sample-based music _before_ Bob Moog's synthesisers appeared. Only they didn't have computers. They sampled real-world sounds, looped them onto early, washing-machine-sized reel-to-reel tape recorders, spliced the tapes up, cut them together, played them back at different speeds, the HARD way.

The original 1963
  • theme music for Doctor Who
  • has stood the test of time so well that it's been re-used (albeit remixed) in the new series. It's far, far more timeless and beautiful than the tiresome jangling electric guitars and "Mmmm, yeaaah!"-level lyrics we hear so often today.

    Electronics are a tool. You get out what you put in.

    I hope Bob Moog will be remembered for the great tools he produced. The music those tools enabled us to hear, be it good or bad, wasn't his fault.


    --
    Sean Timarco Baggaley

  • No, that's not a typo. Doctor Who really _is_ that old. As is the title music heard in the WAV file on the end of that link.
  • Sean Timarco Baggaley (Est. 1971.)Warning: May contain bollocks.
    Quote:I personally hold the opinion that synthesizers and digital signal processing are the worst things that happened to music in its entire history.

    I could post some music that'd make you change your mind, but my buddy would kill me. Suffice to say, if it wasn't for synthesizers, we wouldn't have had all those great 80's videogame tunes, therefore you are wrong. =P

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