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  1. May 18, 2017 · Synthesizers allow musicians to create unique electronically-produced sounds. Robert Moog's solid-state synthesizer was musically superior and much more port...

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  2. Aug 22, 2005 · Robert Moog, Inventor of the Music Synthesizer Karen Grigsby Bates remembers musical innovator Robert Moog, who died recently of a brain tumor at the age of 71. His signature creation, the Moog ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Moog_MusicMoog Music - Wikipedia

    Website. www.moogmusic.com. Moog Music Inc. ( / moʊɡ / mohg [1]) is an American synthesizer company based in Asheville, North Carolina. It was founded in 1953 as R. A. Moog Co. by Robert Moog and his father and was renamed Moog Music in 1972. Its early instruments included the Moog synthesizer (the first commercial synthesizer), followed by ...

  4. Apr 11, 2017 · A project of the musician and composer Wendy Carlos (released under her birth name Walter Carlos), the album consists of 12 Bach standards performed on what Newsweek was calling “the Steinway of the future”: a then-novel synthesizer called the Moog. Born in New York City in 1934, Robert Moog (rhymes with “vogue”) came of age when ...

  5. Jul 13, 2021 · Perhaps it wasn't Bob Moog, Don Buchla, Peter Zinovieff, Herbert Belar, Harry Olson or even Leon Theremin or Thaddeus Cahill who single-handedly invented a new instrument, but instead, the synthesizer happened as an inevitable result of countless discoveries by a multitude of creative minds fascinated by the potential of exponentially improving ...

  6. Moog Modular Synthesizer (United States, 1964) The Moog Synthesizer was a transistorized, voltage-controlled synthesizer composed of individual audio generating and processing modules. It was played with a monophonic, organ-style keyboard or other controllers and programmed with patch cords. Learn More.

  7. Introduction. Robert (Bob) Arthur Moog (1934-2005) invented the first commercial electronic musical instrument—known as the “Moog Synthesizer”—over a three-year period of development from 1964 to 1967. Bob was an enterprising PhD student in Engineering Physics at Cornell University when he moved to Trumansburg, New York, a village ...

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