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Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Wed May 08, 2013 3:56 pm
by dr_floyd
http://www.eastofborneo.org/articles/su ... g-in-india

Very sad photo of an abandoned Moog modular. Also interesting to read of Tudor's dislike for both man and machine version of Moog.

Image

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Wed May 08, 2013 6:54 pm
by thealien666
I'll never understand people not taking care of such expensive, and precious, instruments.

Some people just don't care. And I don't care about such people, even if he's been dead for 17 years.

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Wed May 08, 2013 8:47 pm
by Trigger
Looks like a IIp with a sequencer cab. Wonder what the cab on the lower right is? And what are those VU meters for?

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Wed May 08, 2013 8:53 pm
by CZ Rider
Always wondered what was in that large crate going to India with Bob and Co. posing in Trumansburg.
From The Moog Archive site:
Image
Looks to be a stock 2P with an extra cabinet containing a 960 sequencer and 912 envelope followers, with two custom preamps.

There were many abandoned Moogs in the dark ages of the 80's. I remember explaning to many 80's synth players that a Minimoog was still usefull as a bass and lead synthesizer. I was told it was mostly useless as it had no memory presets and only played one note at a time. Very few wanted a monophonic synthesizer at the time. That was just the mindset back then. Glad it has gone full circle and the old Moogs are fully appreciated for what they are today.

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Wed May 08, 2013 9:15 pm
by Box
CZ Rider wrote:There were many abandoned Moogs in the dark ages of the 80's. I remember explaning to many 80's synth players that a Minimoog was still usefull as a bass and lead synthesizer. I was told it was mostly useless as it had no memory presets and only played one note at a time. Very few wanted a monophonic synthesizer at the time. That was just the mindset back then. Glad it has gone full circle and the old Moogs are fully appreciated for what they are today.
I could've done with the appreciation holding off for another decade or so. I was born at the wrong time and now I have to pay an arm and a leg for a collector's item just so I can use it for its original purpose.

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Wed May 08, 2013 11:35 pm
by Ledbetter
The horror! The title of this thread should warn of the graphic image.

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Thu May 09, 2013 1:23 am
by EricK
Yikes! Horrible After/Before pics. The doctor is surely smiling, which sucks seeing what happened to the unit.

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Thu May 09, 2013 9:21 am
by Just Me
Tudor sounds like the typical intellectual stereotypical ass. Hates everything, so has to create a weird environment around himself and fill it with sycophants. Be a footnote in the lives of luminaries of the time. Like Wyatt hanging out with every musician in US in the 70's.

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Thu May 09, 2013 2:02 pm
by tommyecho
I think David Tudor was pretty freaking cool, personally.

:D

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Thu May 09, 2013 3:44 pm
by Trigger
CZ Rider wrote:Always wondered what was in that large crate going to India with Bob and Co. posing in Trumansburg.
From The Moog Archive site:
Image
Looks to be a stock 2P with an extra cabinet containing a 960 sequencer and 912 envelope followers, with two custom preamps.

There were many abandoned Moogs in the dark ages of the 80's. I remember explaning to many 80's synth players that a Minimoog was still usefull as a bass and lead synthesizer. I was told it was mostly useless as it had no memory presets and only played one note at a time. Very few wanted a monophonic synthesizer at the time. That was just the mindset back then. Glad it has gone full circle and the old Moogs are fully appreciated for what they are today.
Wonder what the crate is worth?

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Thu May 09, 2013 3:46 pm
by thealien666
Probably $20 in wood. :mrgreen:

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Thu May 09, 2013 3:53 pm
by Trigger
thealien666 wrote:Probably $20 in wood. :mrgreen:
That's not just any crate, my friend--that's a Moog crate!
Bob surely touched it! Maybe the wood came from his farm (is it walnut???)

Let the bidding begin!!

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Thu May 09, 2013 7:04 pm
by unfiltered37
Indian tech support wasn't what it is now.

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Fri May 10, 2013 9:53 am
by MC
The article says the studio suffered flooding of eight feet of water, and that Moog looks like it has flood damage.

Re: Abandoned Moog Modular in India

Posted: Fri May 10, 2013 10:05 am
by MC
Trigger wrote:
thealien666 wrote:Probably $20 in wood. :mrgreen:
That's not just any crate, my friend--that's a Moog crate!
Bob surely touched it! Maybe the wood came from his farm (is it walnut???)

Let the bidding begin!!
Heh... I just joined a southern rock band based in Trumansburg. The drummer/founder is a member of the Tompkins County historical society. When I told him of my RAM Minimoog, he said he knew Bob Moog back when the company was still in Trumansburg. He knew where Bob lived because he had done some cabinet woodworking for the RA Moog shop, he had supplied some of the walnut they used :!: I'm going to have him make a replacement walnut trim for the top of the panel on my Minimoog, which was MIA when I bought it.

So I'm a Moog enthusiast playing piano in a southern rock band founded by a historian who knows the Moog history which is based in the town that birthed Moog synthesizers - and I'm not playing on any Moogs :? The only southern rock song I know of that had any Moog was Skynyrd's "Saturday Night Special", and you have to strain to pick it out of the mix. And I have a pic of the late great Steve Gaines in the studio, and in the background is a Moog 55 modular.