That is actually quite an interesting Moog that Mickey Dolenz has. Acording to the Moog archives site, that was the first model III made with the portable cabinets. Wonder if Dolenz special ordered it this way? Those portable cabinets later became the standard for performance systems that made it to many stages in the following years. And eventually led to the development of a Minimoog, the ultimate in portable performance moogs.
Another pic of Dolenz and his Moog.
That looks to have a custom 8 input mixer below the oscillators, and that portable keyboard has no visible electronics on either end cheek for range and scale. Perhaps another custom one off made for Dolenz with the electronics on one of the CP panels on the main synth. The Moog Archive site lists this as the 20th Modular made and sold on 9/15/67.With the description “First Model III-P, Oak Cabinets 901-2,901A,901B-8,901C,903,902-3,904ABC,905,914,984,911-3,911A,912”. No mention of the custom keyboard or ribbon controller. It was early supporters of Moog like Dolenz that made it possible for them to continue building modulars.
The video is great too! First time I had ever seen a Moog back when this originally aired on american TV. Looks to be properly patched from the begining close up capture here.
You synth geeks! It doesnt matter if its patched properly, the monkees faked pretty much everything musical they did. cool video though. They used pretty good session musicians for their tracks.
The actual Moog used on “Daily Nightly” was most likely Paul Beaver’s “Synthesizer III” from early '67 since the synth overdubs were made in august '67, over a month before Dolenz received his III-P.
Here’s a picture of the early model used by Beaver & Krause (this synth was also used on Zodiac: cosmic sounds, The Trip soundtrack, The Doors’ Strange Days and The Nonesuch guide to electronic music etc.):
The module configuration seems to be pretty much the same as in Dolenz’s system.
You can add Emil Richards’ New sound element ‘stones’ and The Byrds’ "The Notorious Byrd Brothers" to the list of albums that feature Paul Beaver’s early Moog.
I read Paul Beaver did the session, but the Monkees thought his work was much too “safe”; they wanted “out there” so Micky redid the part himself.
If you read Andrew Sandoval’s great book on their history, there’s more on the synth and it refutes the myth that they didn’t play on their own albums. Yes, there were session players, but the Monkees themselves played a LOT of tracks. Even the Beatles were big fans of the Monkees and their music…
I have access to Micky Dolenz’ 1967 R.A. Moog Modular III-p or 3C. It’s still visibly mint, the owner is selling it and I am representing him. It’s a museum piece. It may have been the moog used on The Doors Strange Days song, I am trying to verify that. Pretty sure Micky sold it to Bobby Sherman “for a song”. There are 3 wood cabinets and 28 modules total, including all three 904’s, ten oscillators and some apparently rare one-off mixer and I/O modules without serials or model numbers - but with black lettering-gun tape. Talk about old school!
Nice!
Can you post any photos of the system?
Very historic indeed. To my knowledge, this was the first portable cabinet Moog modular made. One of those early systems that seemed to dissapear. Glad to hear that it was not lost or scrapped. That keyboard was a strange configuration too, and was built to be portable.
Not to many photos of that unique system. Would be great to document some of this.
It was indeed sold to Bobby Sherman, now an ambulance tech. Also would like to see some detail shots of this instrument - I’ve been looking for it for 20+ years. Still in LA?
You may be disappointed to know that Electra studios had their own Moog, as used on some Doors and others. And Paul Beaver’s was often brought to Electra (the building is still on La Cienega) for sessions (George Harrison’s Electronic Sound, Mort Garson records, etc.) What are the clues that make you think the Monkees’ machine was used?
Wasn’t there a connection with Jac Holzman (Elektra) and Beaver & Krause as far as the Elektra/Nonesuch label? IIRC, that’s where the Nonesuch Guide to Electronic Music came from…That might explain Beaver’s session work with Elektra artists, and that he might have sold Elektra their system.
Definitely. There was a connection AND Mort Garson (also a big proponent of early hippie Moog stuff) was there, too. Elektra bought their Moog through the sales agents (I think really mainly Paul Beaver, technically, but will have to ask Bernie if he was legally a rep, too) which they were on the West Coast. I don’t know all the details, but it’s a small world - especially then - and I’ve got to find Bob’s story about the studio visit when he first heard the Cosmic Sounds record being made… hilarious. I think he was stunned by the West Coast hippie culture, being from a very different NY aesthetic…
I was told by Bernie Krause that they (Beaver & Krause) usually used their own Moog system* on most of the recording sessions they participated to since the artists who had a Moog couldn’t much figure out how to play theirs. This include albums such as “Zodiac. Cosmic sounds”,“The Trip” soundtrack, Strange Days by The Doors, Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones Ltd/Monkees, The Notorious Byrd Brothers/The Byrds, Performance soundtrack and others.
from about spring '67 through mid '68 they used a late '66/early '67 model “synthesizer III” and after that they had two IIIP’s with the extra double sequencer box units plus a Moog 10, and Krause later added a Moog 12. I don’t know what happened to their original system but Beaver’s system probably ended up with Dan Wyman/Sound arts when they took over Beaver & Krause’s studio (which originally went under the name Parasound) in 1975.
I’ve seen the lower mixer module on an earlier unit from '65 or '66, there is no serial or model number. The power unit is serial 1019 and the third I/O keyboard interface has no serial or model numbers. I’d guess proto’s or one-offs or customs early models.
I also have a 1974 10-voice Oberheim - 4-voice w keyboard and 6-voice expander, all original, appears mint. It is For Sale.