In a Moog Mood? Here's a forum for discussion of general Moog topics.
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MC
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by MC » Tue Mar 09, 2010 4:01 pm
And before that there was this
(the modules should look familiar)

Gear list: '04 Saturn Ion, John Deere X300 tractor, ganged set of seven reel mowers for 3 acres of lawn, herd of sheep for backup lawn mowers, two tiger cats for mouse population control Oh you meant MUSIC gear Oops I hit the 255 character limi
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_DemonDan_
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by _DemonDan_ » Tue Mar 09, 2010 4:56 pm
Ha!
The opening downward riff reminds me of the middle rockin' part of Spinal Tap's "America".
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_DemonDan_
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nickster
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by nickster » Tue Mar 09, 2010 6:11 pm
Dig his Platforms ..... Man.
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mikael488
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by mikael488 » Thu Mar 11, 2010 5:22 pm
While on the subject of guitar synths...
Timo Laine's "Symphonic Slam" is said to be the first true album to be based on guitar synthesizer.
However, an even earlier album featuring some use of guitar synth is "Inner Worlds" with Mahavishnu Orchestra/John McLaughlin.
On this album--recorded July/August 1975--McLaughlin was playing a modified Gibson with a hex pickup going through a 360 Systems converter and six Minimoogs!
MCLAUGHLIN:
"I began experimenting with guitar synths back in 1974. Bob Easton at 360 Systems came up with a rig that used his interface first with an EMU module, and then with a separate Mini-Moog for each string, which was like driving an eight-wheel truck. I was always saying, “Ladies and gentlemen why don’t you chat amongst yourselves while I tune up my instrument.” It was kind of a joke, and after one major tour I gave it up. So, the problem was that the technology wasn’t very good in the early days. For example, the latency was terrible. I mean it was like 50ms on the low strings! But you’ve got to go with what you have, and that was the best technology available at the time."
Mahavishnu Orchestra/John McLaughlin - All In The Family (1975):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=szT1BGfkujE
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Gower
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by Gower » Thu Mar 25, 2010 1:39 am
Anybody know of a stomp box or processor that can make my guitar sound like a Moog synth or a clavichord?
I'm going for the Stevie Wonder "Superstition" type sound. Maybe an auto-wah that has a reverse, or something like that. Help!
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mysterycircuits
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by mysterycircuits » Thu Mar 25, 2010 1:21 pm
Anybody know of a stomp box or processor that can make my guitar sound like a Moog synth or a clavichord?
Electro Harmonix' Micro Synth is pretty nice IMO. Definitely worth checking out.
EHX HOG and POG could also be interesting. Of course there's no comparison to the real thing..
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_DemonDan_
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by _DemonDan_ » Thu Mar 25, 2010 1:33 pm
Gower wrote:Anybody know of a stomp box or processor that can make my guitar
sound like a Moog synth or a clavichord? I'm going for the Stevie
Wonder "Superstition" type sound.
Hi Gower,
An MF-107 FreqBox into an MF-101 LowPass Filter could approximate that sound.
And it would genuinely be a *real* synthesizer.
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_DemonDan_
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LWG
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by LWG » Fri Mar 26, 2010 2:34 am
Gower wrote:Anybody know of a stomp box or processor that can make my guitar sound like a Moog synth or a clavichord?
I'm going for the Stevie Wonder "Superstition" type sound. Maybe an auto-wah that has a reverse, or something like that. Help!
Hello,
"Superstition" is a straight clav and doesn't use any auto-wah.
Are you sure you aren't referring to this?:
Stevie Wonder - "Higher Ground"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wZ3ZG_W ... fvw&fmt=18
Regards,
Lawrence
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MarbledMoog
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Contact:
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by MarbledMoog » Fri Mar 26, 2010 6:16 am
yeah if the Moog guitar was even close to being a 360 systems guitar, I would buy it in a heartbeat (that and if it wasn't overpriced to all hell.)
The Moog guitar just uses ebow type technology built into the guitar. Very cool, but its not an analog synth guitar, its just a wacky guitar.
MF-101, MF-102, CP-251