Just damn - the new Moog Synthesizer

Talk about a trip down memory lane. One of the biggest touring (as opposed to Hans Zimmer's studio system) synthesizers belonged to Keith Emerson. Moog Music is re-creating a couple copies of this synthesizer for sale:

20140425-moog-emerson.jpg
Moog Music Announces The New Emerson Moog Modular System
Moog Music unveils one of its largest engineering undertakings, the new Emerson Moog Modular System.

On the 50th anniversary of the introduction of the Moog Modular, the first voltage controlled synthesizer, Moog Music is proud to honor Keith Emerson and his seminal collaboration with Bob Moog. Today, for the first time at Moogfest 2014, Moog Music reveals its three year effort faithfully recreating the iconic Emerson Moog Modular.

In the intervening 50 years since the advent of the first Moog synthesizer, people have steadily come to appreciate the power and flexibility of the early Moog modular systems. Now in 2014, 60 years after Bob Moog started his electronic musical instrument company, with great respect for the tradition, design, and craftsmanship of the original Moog modular systems, Moog Music proudly announces the recreation of arguably the most famous synthesizer in history--Keith Emerson's Moog Modular System.

Over the last 3 years Moog Music has set out to research and build a faithful recreation of this highly complex, custom instrument. Using the original documentation as well as circuit board and art files for nearly every original Moog module, Moog Engineers have painstakingly recreated the original Emerson Modular System. The new Emerson Moog Modular System is comprised of handcrafted Moog modules built from the original circuit designs and are true recreations of the originals, utilizing the same hand assembly methods used in the Moog Music factory in Trumansburg, NY in 1969. The modules in the new Emerson Moog Modular System are built just as the originals were, by hand-stuffing and hand-soldering components to circuit boards, and using traditional wiring methods. Even the front panels are photo-etched aluminum (a rare process now), which is the classic and durable, look of vintage Moog modules.

Moog Music is proud to partner with Keith Emerson and salute his pioneering artistry with the announcement that Moog will build a handful of these incredible, custom handcrafted Emerson Moog Modular Systems.

Price (of course) is available upon request. With all the labor and engineering and with the small production run, it will have to be in the $30K range but these are monster synthesizers and worth every single penny. There is something about a large analog synthesizer that digital simply can not touch. Resale value will only increase as Moog builds really really well.

For those unfamiliar with analog synthesizers, each of the panels in the photograph has a specific function -- introducing outside sounds (microphone preamp), producing native sounds (oscillators) changing the sounds (various filters) changing the volume and location (controlled amplifiers and panning circuits).

These modules all accept voltage inputs for controlling the pitch and intensity so other modules are used just for generation and processing of these control voltages.

Finally, the interconnections between the various modules are made by the performer with various "patch cords" going out of one module and into another. Some of these patch cords carry the audio, some carry the control voltages and some carry trigger signals to start sequences of events. The flexibility of even a small system is amazing.

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About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by DaveH published on April 25, 2014 6:38 PM.

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