Spent a couple days with Bob and his wife Shirleigh early 1986 in Vancouver BC when they came to discuss showcasing of Ray Kurzweil's new digital sampler keyboard at the 1986 World's Fair Canada Place pavilion, of which I was the media tech planner. A kind gentle guy, great engineer and visionary. He was working with Ray at that time to transition from analog to digital keyboards. I sensed his heart wasn't really into the business hustle, and that digital was less of a passion than the tactile engineering art-form of his analog keyboards.
This was too short!!!! I personnaly saw Bob Moog once in about 1976 in a music store in Syracuse NY. He was visiting stores with Roger Powell, doing clinics in support of Roger's amazing "defection" from ARP synths to Moog. Bob stayed in the background, behind Roger's massive synth rack. It was an amazing afternoon. I once found myself driving by the Moog "estate" outside Trumansburg NY. "MOOG" was on the mailbox and the place looked like a mad scientist lived there.
In the song “Abracadabra (Abracab)” (1982), the Minimoog patch “Square in 5ths” mixed with the Minimoog patch “Saw in 5ths” and the Hammond B3 organ, Yamaha GS1 patch “Electric Organ” and Minimoog patch “Square” sometimes as the cool synth/rock synth and ascending synth and descending synth were heard.
It explains the sentence "A record called "Switched on Bach" by Walther - now Wendy - Carlos". In 1980 a sex change operation was still pretty unusual so they just wanted to explain why his name was changed from Walther to Wendy. Remember that when you are making public service television you have to over-explain a little to be sure that the average, non-enthusiastic viewer can understand it too.
@@organfairy It's very obviously *after* coming out that matters. Just for a point of comparison, although being trans is a totally separate and different thing from sexual orientation, imagine a gay person came out you wouldn't say shit like "back when so and so was straight." It's just not how this works. What matters is their actual identity.
It's interesting that the instrument shown at 0:35 was one of the last ones produced but the Pitch Bend and Modulation Wheels are clear like the earliest models ever built.
Everybody: this gentleman has put us as far as we are now on music. this man has written history changing the sounds of the world through his humble circuits and oscillators.. putting on the basis for all Golden Prog Era. Mr Moog I can´t honestly hope and wish no more than a deep God Bless you! Cheers!
Robert Moog actually wasn't the guy who engineered Minimoog, it was his employee Bill Hemsath who got the idea of compact Moog synthesizer and build the first prototype himself.
Remembering Robert Moog born on May 23, 1934. He was an American engineering physicist and pioneer of electronic music. He was the founder of Moog Music and the inventor of the first commercial synthesizer. - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Moog
This is not te downfall of music, it's a great instrument and you can make all kinds of music with it. It's what you do with it that counts. I like rock music but I had some synthesizer lessons and it was a shitload of fun.
Google had brought this man to my attention and I am very glad that they did. Happy birthday to you Mr. Bob. without your involvement & contribution who knows what music we would be missing out on at this current time. So thanks (even I though you probably wont see this. hopefully a relative of his will. lol)
Big thank you for this incredible invention Dr. Moog. Thank you for using your genius to make this revolutionary instrument a reality. You have engineered a tool that is used for art.
Word Sovereign777. He is the unsung hero of electronic music. His genius continues to go under the household name radar, yet is undeniably amazing. Thank you Bob Moog! for those basslines and experiences in electronic music!
I remember 'Hooked On Bach' from way back. I'd wondered where those sounds came from. Now I'm a serious analogue junky. I have a Moog Rogue and a Moog Liberation and I love them!
@THEH4VOC The music was empty and without form. And Moog said "Let there be synth!", and there was synth. Banks and Emerson heard the synth, and it rocked!
In the 1970s there was still alot of apprehension among rock artists to use synthesizers. Emerson Lake & Palmer ,David Bowie , and an American artist named Gary Wright were among the first to embrace the synthesizer. In December 1975 Gary Wright released the first album to feature all songs recorded with synthesized instrumentation. He had huge hits with Dream Weaver and Love Is Alive. By the 1980s there weren't many music artists who WEREN'T using synthesizers
@KRAFTWERK2K1 You're right. There are hundreds of uncontrolled variables including the degree of power supply hum and temperature coefficients of the VCOs.
It's not a Electric piano, it is a synthesizer -.- "Electric pianos produce sounds mechanically and the sounds are turned into electrical signals by pickups. Unlike a synthesizer, the electric piano is not an electronic instrument, but electro-mechanical." - en.wikipedia(x)org/wiki/Electric_piano
I love the totally idealized waveforms they show while he's demoing the oscillator, the real waveforms coming out of a mini look very different than that!
thats beautiful :) im a 19 year old music student and i really wanna look into this -its sounds amazing. a lot nicer than any of them pre set keyboards to my ears. might just be that im a big rick wakeman fan talking here but thats just what i think XD
0:17 I don't know why, but the rapid-scrolling '(sex change)' gave me a giggle. As if the people in the '80s couldn't work out what the narrator meant without clarification
@DancingSpiderman A Juno 106 AND Korg Poly-60??? Probably no doubt THE two chintziest sounding poly-synths that were ever made. I play my B3 through a Leslie 147 on a weekly basis and let me tell you there is no sampler out yet that comes close to the sound of that instrument. Nobody is telling you what you should or shouldn't be excited about but don't let something that is real be the reminder of an imitation!
Yea, we can easily say he was one of the most important figures in the history of music.
ABSOLUTELY
Nah.
@@Woodsaras Who the hell are you, degenerate? No one even knows who you are, ya hussy. 😂
@@Woodsaras Nearly every song you hear nowadays has a synthesizer in it somewhere
@@rustyshackleford634 yes
Thanks Dr Moog. Your genius changed music forever.
Spent a couple days with Bob and his wife Shirleigh early 1986 in Vancouver BC when they came to discuss showcasing of Ray Kurzweil's new digital sampler keyboard at the 1986 World's Fair Canada Place pavilion, of which I was the media tech planner. A kind gentle guy, great engineer and visionary. He was working with Ray at that time to transition from analog to digital keyboards. I sensed his heart wasn't really into the business hustle, and that digital was less of a passion than the tactile engineering art-form of his analog keyboards.
Mr Moog made my music listening experience a pleasurable one throughout my life .Thank you ,sir
"and finally, the release"
*video ends*
RIP Bob, your soul lives in our synths!
This was too short!!!! I personnaly saw Bob Moog once in about 1976 in a music store in Syracuse NY. He was visiting stores with Roger Powell, doing clinics in support of Roger's amazing "defection" from ARP synths to Moog. Bob stayed in the background, behind Roger's massive synth rack. It was an amazing afternoon.
I once found myself driving by the Moog "estate" outside Trumansburg NY. "MOOG" was on the mailbox and the place looked like a mad scientist lived there.
It´s so cool to share the same Birthday with Dr. Bob Moog. I always loved to work the Minimoog! =D
I meet Dr Moog in 2003 is a great man and the true father of all electronic music in the world today.. :) A GREAT GREAT GREAT MAN...
Essential demo from Bob Moog for any electronic musician.
I've got no words. our (synth)god explains how his son works.
i've*
God also explains the use of grammar.
@Agnostic Monk ','. God also explains the proper use of a comma in correct construction of a sentence.
Actually, God doesn't give a shit about grammar and definitely doesn't explain shit about it :D Actually , God dislikes grammar nazi's
@@trollface1994 I've edited it, are you ok with it now? Now please, let me watch this nice video. THANK YOU!
@ God likes people who are literate and can educate themselves.
yes you are right, I can't imagine actual music without him !! RIP Mr Moog
All hail the master. You will be missed Dr. Moog.
Happy birthday, Robert Moog! May your legacy live on!
Thank You Master ;)
In the song “Abracadabra (Abracab)” (1982), the Minimoog patch “Square in 5ths” mixed with the Minimoog patch “Saw in 5ths” and the Hammond B3 organ, Yamaha GS1 patch “Electric Organ” and Minimoog patch “Square” sometimes as the cool synth/rock synth and ascending synth and descending synth were heard.
It's wonderful that a genius can speak in simple talk.
There used to be a synth museum in the UK in the mid-90's - full of moogs. It closed years ago due to finacial woes and lack of interest.
It explains the sentence "A record called "Switched on Bach" by Walther - now Wendy - Carlos".
In 1980 a sex change operation was still pretty unusual so they just wanted to explain why his name was changed from Walther to Wendy. Remember that when you are making public service television you have to over-explain a little to be sure that the average, non-enthusiastic viewer can understand it too.
*her name
@@elliespohr It was his now it's her. I suppose which one depends on if you see it as it used to be or what is now.
@@organfairy It's very obviously *after* coming out that matters. Just for a point of comparison, although being trans is a totally separate and different thing from sexual orientation, imagine a gay person came out you wouldn't say shit like "back when so and so was straight." It's just not how this works. What matters is their actual identity.
@@elliespohr nah gay is gay forever , trans becomes trans
@@elliespohr also why care , both are edible
It's interesting that the instrument shown at 0:35 was one of the last ones produced but the Pitch Bend and Modulation Wheels are clear like the earliest models ever built.
The earliest have no wheels first ones with wheels have smooth clear wheels then smooth white wheels then the ribbed classic moog wheels
@@xxheartbrokexx100 If you are talking about the prototypes, then yes, wheels were added to the production models.
Yep I was, just being nitpicky sorry if I was rude I appreciate that you have moog knowledge.
The Minimoog... An instrument so amazing, it can actually change your sex while you are playing it!
it can certainly take your pants off
That's what Walter Carlos did with his Moog modular!
11 years to late to comment, but thanks for the giggle.
I would gladly take my chances if it meant I could have one
Gay
Everybody: this gentleman has put us as far as we are now on music. this man has written history changing the sounds of the world through his humble circuits and oscillators.. putting on the basis for all Golden Prog Era. Mr Moog I can´t honestly hope and wish no more than a deep God Bless you!
Cheers!
( s e x c h a n g e )
That made me lol
mwhahaha.
lol!
Yeah dude I was like WTF!??
Really?!
this guy is a genius, thanks for bringing us one of the greatest.coolest instruments
I got the pleasure to meet him once. Great Person!
Thank you for your great invention. I bought a Minimoog D and I am very happy about it.
RIP. Thanks for the memories and for releasing the minimoog once again.
This pitch wheel looks so futuristic.
Robert Moog actually wasn't the guy who engineered Minimoog, it was his employee Bill Hemsath who got the idea of compact Moog synthesizer and build the first prototype himself.
Remembering Robert Moog born on May 23, 1934. He was an American engineering physicist and pioneer of electronic music. He was the founder of Moog Music and the inventor of the first commercial synthesizer. - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Moog
Happy birthday Robert Moog,Dr.Moog.Thank you for what you have given us.You will live forever through sound synthesizing!!!Cheers everyone
my friend has a mini moog. amazing synthsizer. pure analog power :-)
Somebody give this man a medal.
...or uh............at least a cool million dollars.
That was the best demonstration of what the ASD and R are ive ever seen.
Truely a masterpiece Bob! We miss you.
Wow, he explains this instrument in a very straight forward manner. :)
Thank you Dr Moog for your wonderful invention
love the smile at the intro of bob...sucha genius
Just the explanation of the 4 parts of the envelope is worth its weight in gold…now i get it!
how could you 'dislike' this, Bob's a legend!
I know Bob, he was a very lovely person. RIP, Bob. Your Minimoog works and works and works.
This is not te downfall of music, it's a great instrument and you can make all kinds of music with it. It's what you do with it that counts. I like rock music but I had some synthesizer lessons and it was a shitload of fun.
RIP dr. Moog. And many thanks for giving the world these magnificant machines called synthesizers
Google had brought this man to my attention and I am very glad that they did.
Happy birthday to you Mr. Bob. without your involvement & contribution who knows what music we would be missing out on at this current time. So thanks (even I though you probably wont see this. hopefully a relative of his will. lol)
yooo s/o to Wendy Carlos for starting a long legacy of trans modular enthusiasts
real talk
Big thank you for this incredible invention Dr. Moog. Thank you for using your genius to make this revolutionary instrument a reality. You have engineered a tool that is used for art.
Wow factor. Genius explains the origins of analog mono synth masterpiece. Thank you sir for synthesizers.
RIP Herbert Deutsch!! I miss you! WAXX TRAXX TO THE MAXX on wusb FM NY
He sounds like a nervous but knowledgeable grade schooler doing a show and tell. Adorable!
WOOOOW!
What a teacher - he explains so well, and makes it really simple.
Would surel like a lesson from him :)
Thanks for posting this!
@yfe24 Brandenburg Concerto #3. Probably most popular Bach piece next to Toccata & Fugue.
Thanks Doc!
Brilliant man
Great video memories Moog, fantastic, like ;-)
Word Sovereign777. He is the unsung hero of electronic music. His genius continues to go under the household name radar, yet is undeniably amazing. Thank you Bob Moog! for those basslines and experiences in electronic music!
Share if you like synthmusic! R.I.P. Bob Moog
I love Robert. His invention is the best on our planet earth! 🥰🥰🥰
I remember 'Hooked On Bach' from way back.
I'd wondered where those sounds came from. Now I'm a serious analogue junky.
I have a Moog Rogue and a Moog Liberation and I love them!
LOL, I love the floating "sex change" subtitle! God, those were simpler times! 🥰
Yes this gets me too every time. Not to hate on trans people ofcourse
Amazing.
@THEH4VOC The music was empty and without form. And Moog said "Let there be synth!", and there was synth. Banks and Emerson heard the synth, and it rocked!
Synthesis 101. Thank-you Dr.
In the 1970s there was still alot of apprehension among rock artists to use synthesizers. Emerson Lake & Palmer ,David Bowie , and an American artist named Gary Wright were among the first to embrace the synthesizer.
In December 1975 Gary Wright released the first album to feature all songs recorded with synthesized instrumentation. He had huge hits with Dream Weaver and Love Is Alive.
By the 1980s there weren't many music artists who WEREN'T using synthesizers
.. thanks bob for giving us great sounds !
@KRAFTWERK2K1 You're right. There are hundreds of uncontrolled variables including the degree of power supply hum and temperature coefficients of the VCOs.
I love when TH-cam algorithms throw me a video from 13 years ago that I haven't seen.
His face 1:07 xD
xD
"Oops. I've exposed the Pac Man secret!"
Lol almost mistook it for a police siren
He is teaching an electronics lecture in the process. I dig it.
Nice, now I actually know how to correctly pronounce "Moog". M-OH-G with a long 'O', instead of MOO-G like I'm badly imitating a cow.
He did explain the stuff he build very well!
Dr. Moog was a genius - With a great regard for musicians.
I had that exact album...Switched On Bach.. I have no idea what happened to it. I probably wore it out!
Love it. Thank you.
Cool atmosphere.
Liked.
It's not a Electric piano, it is a synthesizer -.- "Electric pianos produce sounds mechanically and the sounds are turned into electrical signals by pickups. Unlike a synthesizer, the electric piano is not an electronic instrument, but electro-mechanical." - en.wikipedia(x)org/wiki/Electric_piano
This man created the most wonderfull musical insrument ever he is my hero
I love the totally idealized waveforms they show while he's demoing the oscillator, the real waveforms coming out of a mini look very different than that!
GRACIAS TOTALES!!!
thats beautiful :)
im a 19 year old music student and i really wanna look into this -its sounds amazing. a lot nicer than any of them pre set keyboards to my ears. might just be that im a big rick wakeman fan talking here but thats just what i think XD
Thanx, Bob... Nice Keyboards!!
It's kind of funny how back then, the Minimoog was a relatively small synth, but the synths coming out today make it look gigantic.
Great video. I have never seen before.
This is so cool
Thanks, Bob. You're greatly missed.
so little ones become my heroes, here is one
science for the sake of art is a beautiful thing.
0:17 I don't know why, but the rapid-scrolling '(sex change)' gave me a giggle. As if the people in the '80s couldn't work out what the narrator meant without clarification
I didnt know Moog looked so much like Paul Stewart, the actor who played "Doc" Kaiser in "12 O' Clock High."
Totally amazing doodle today!! :)
@DancingSpiderman A Juno 106 AND Korg Poly-60??? Probably no doubt THE two chintziest sounding poly-synths that were ever made. I play my B3 through a Leslie 147 on a weekly basis and let me tell you there is no sampler out yet that comes close to the sound of that instrument. Nobody is telling you what you should or shouldn't be excited about but don't let something that is real be the reminder of an imitation!
1:07 Pac Man
AHAHAH
Love that they used to original cover of Switched-On Bach for this.
Cool, a documentary that doesn't dumb it down for the masses and actually lets an expert discuss something in technical detail.
this man is a genious, long live bob moog!!!!
i love how he looks when he played that little song
He just grins like:'sweet huh?'
which it is...
His expression at 1:08 is priceless!
MiniMe: Eeeeeeeee!
MiniMoog: Woo-ooh-woo-ooh-woo-ooh!
Happy Birthday Bob!
Check out Synthplex in Los Angeles, March 28-March 31, 2019! More info and tickets at Synthplex.com.
some of those demonstrations of waveforms sound directly from the video games of my childhood... so THAT'S why!!