New technology always forges a new creative path
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It was sometime back in mid-60s that music, as we knew it, began to die. At least, I’m sure that was how it felt at the time.
In 1964, the Moog synthesizer was born. It was the creation of an engineer named Robert Moog, who no doubt thought that naming it after himself would be a good thing. (It’s also pronounced mogue — like “vogue” — not Moog, like a cow with speech difficulties.) And it was, eventually. The original Moog was a big machine that could replace a wide variety of mus
In 1964, the Moog synthesizer was born. It was the creation of an engineer named Robert Moog, who no doubt thought that naming it after himself would be a good thing. (It’s also pronounced mogue — like “vogue” — not Moog, like a cow with speech difficulties.) And it was, eventually. The original Moog was a big machine that could replace a wide variety of mus
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