CELEBRATE BOB Moog Factory Mural Time Lapse

618 views

o #CelebrateBob on what would have been his his 78th birthday, Moog Music commissioned a larger-than-life mural of Dr. Moog for their factory in Asheville, NC. The mural was created by local Asheville artist, Dustin Spagnola. HAPPY BIRTHDAY BOB! Love, your family at Moog.

Dustin Spagnola is a contemporary visual artist who has shown and created work in NYC, Miami, New Orleans, Richmond, Atlanta, Washington, DC and in his home, Asheville, NC. His work is often political in nature and eschews corporate advertising and graffiti culture alike. .

You may also like

  • Watch CELEBRATE BOB Moog Factory Mural Time Lapse Video
    CELEBRATE BOB Moog Factory Mural Time Lapse

    o #CelebrateBob on what would have been his his 78th birthday, Moog Music commissioned a larger-than-life mural of Dr. Moog for their factory in Asheville, NC. The mural was created by local Asheville artist, Dustin Spagnola. HAPPY BIRTHDAY BOB! Love, your family at Moog.

    Dustin Spagnola is a contemporary visual artist who has shown and created work in NYC, Miami, New Orleans, Richmond, Atlanta, Washington, DC and in his home, Asheville, NC. His work is often political in nature and eschews corporate advertising and graffiti culture alike.

    Entertainment video | 618 views

  • Watch A Stunning Time Lapse Video to Restore Your Faith in Time Lapse Videos Video
    A Stunning Time Lapse Video to Restore Your Faith in Time Lapse Videos

    Restore Your Faith in Time Lapse

    Istanbul! Budapest! San Francisco! Vegas! Storms! The Northern Lights!

    Comedy video | 712 views

  • Watch CELEBRATE BOB Moog Store Performance Video
    CELEBRATE BOB Moog Store Performance

    To #celebratebob on what would have been his his 78th birthday local Asheville piano teacher, Kim Roney, brought two of her pupils to the Moog Store to perform a song in celebration of Bob Moog's life and legacy. Bob Moog is still inspiring creative exploration in children of all ages. Thank you Dr. Moog, Happy Birthday! How has Bob Moog inspired you? #celebratebob.

    Entertainment video | 643 views

  • Watch Dr Bob Moog demonstrates the Minimoog Video
    Dr Bob Moog demonstrates the Minimoog



    In extract from a 1980's BBC Micro Live special on electronic music in which Dr Bob Moog demonstrates the Minimoog.

    Entertainment video | 598 views

  • Watch Bob Moog Fairlight Intro Video
    Bob Moog Fairlight Intro

    Dr Moog demos the Fairlight CMI 1983..

    What would the world of modern music be like without the inventions of Bob Moog? One answer would be: very boring. Bob Moog’s namesake analog synthesizers have affected popular music in ways he might not have expected back in 1954 when he began building theremins with his father. But 50 years later, Bob’s musical instruments have catapulted so many styles of music into the future, and his contributions to both players and technicians grow even more profound in retrospect.

    Where would R&B, rap and hip-hop be if groups like Parliament and Funkadelic hadn’t used Moog keyboards? Where would rock and roll be if groups from Yes to the Beatles hadn’t used Moog keyboards? Would jazz music have branched off into fusion without Herbie Hancock and Chick Corea using Moog keyboards? And would classical music have enjoyed such resurgence without Wendy Carlos and her modular Moog synthesizer? The questions are hypothetical, of course, because synthesizers have infiltrated every style of music, and so many companies have tried to recreate that analog sound. But above all the copycats and spin-offs, it always comes back to one name: Moog.

    After ten years of making theremins, providing unearthly sounds to science fiction movies and avante garde musicians, Bob Moog met experimental composer Herbert Deutsch, whose search for electronic sounds inspired Bob to create the first Moog Modular Synthesizer. Though

    Vlogs video | 844 views

  • Watch BOB Moog Synth - Advanced Sequencer Video
    BOB Moog Synth - Advanced Sequencer

    Born Robert Arthur Moog, May 23, 1934, in New York, NY; died of brain cancer, August 21, 2005, in Asheville, NC. Engineer and inventor. Robert Moog (pronounced mogue) was credited with creating the first practical synthesizer, the Moog synthesizer, as well as other electronic equipment related to the production, performance, and recording of popular music. His synthesizer, in particular, was considered key to the development of popular music in the 1960s and beyond. Yet Moog did not take much credit for his creation. Allan Kozinn of the New York Times quoted Moog as saying, 'I don't design stuff for myself. I'm a toolmaker. I design things that other people want to use.'

    BOB Moog Synth - Advanced Sequencer

    Entertainment video | 627 views

  • Watch Bob Moog Synthesizer 101 Video
    Bob Moog Synthesizer 101

    A basic description on how to simply get a sound out of a Moog or some other old analog synths.

    Bob Moog Synthesizer 101

    Entertainment video | 665 views

  • Watch BOB Moog Synthesizer 201 Video
    BOB Moog Synthesizer 201

    A description on how to use the sequencer section of the Moog synthesizer. WIRING DIAGRAM UP SOON..


    BOB Moog Synthesizer 201

    Entertainment video | 811 views

  • Watch Bob Moog Synthesizer 102 Video
    Bob Moog Synthesizer 102

    More instruction on a fuller, more interesting sound out of the Moog synthesizer.

    More instruction on a fuller, more interesting sound out of the Moog synthesizer.

    Bob Moog Synthesizer 102

    Vlogs video | 709 views

  • Watch Bob Moog The Documentary Video
    Bob Moog The Documentary


    Born Robert Arthur Moog, May 23, 1934, in New York, NY; died of brain cancer, August 21, 2005, in Asheville, NC. Engineer and inventor. Robert Moog (pronounced mogue) was credited with creating the first practical synthesizer, the Moog synthesizer, as well as other electronic equipment related to the production, performance, and recording of popular music. His synthesizer, in particular, was considered key to the development of popular music in the 1960s and beyond. Yet Moog did not take much credit for his creation. Allan Kozinn of the New York Times quoted Moog as saying, 'I don't design stuff for myself. I'm a toolmaker. I design things that other people want to use.'

    Born in 1934 in New York City, Moog was the son of an electronics engineer father and piano teacher mother. As a child, Moog was forced to take piano lessons because his mother wanted him to be a concert pianist. However, Moog took after his father and was interested in building things. When he was 14 years old, he built a Theremin, the first electronic instrument in the world. A Theremin is made of vibrating radio tubes and played by moving the hands around the tubes. Moog continued to build Theremins and kits to make Theremins through high school, enabling him to pay for much of his college education.

    After graduating from the Bronx High School of Science, Moog earned his undergraduate degree in physics from Queens College. In 1957, he graduated from

    Vlogs video | 757 views

Vlogs Video

Commedy Video