A Brief History of the Minimoog Part I
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Follow the life of the Minimoog Synthesizer from its inception through its prolific contributions to poplular music throughout the last 4 decades.
In this first installment documenting the journey of the Minimoog synth through the 1970's, we explore the musicians and the people that were instrumental in bringing the instrument to prominence. We also sit with one of Moog Music's earliest engineers, Bill Hemsath, who recalls the process of the Minimoog's birth and sheds some light on what sets the Moog synthesizer apart from other analog synths.
Watch A Brief History of the Minimoog Part II here: • A Brief History of the...
See more Moog history here: www.moogmusic.com/legacy
Minimoog Model D app available for free for limited time:
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Something that always struck me when seeing a Minimoog was how much of a inviting & friendly looking instrument it looks like. The walnut wood case that houses the ivory white and ebony black keys of the keyboard as well as the metallic metal faceplate with the black and silver rotating knobs and switches, which too is covered by a walnut wood stripe all along the top of its moveable controller panel. All that really has a strong elegance and it really is what i consider a classical handmade Instrument. As little plastic as possible and it is almost as if the wood even adds a bit of its own life to the instrument. The analog circuitry may not have been very tuning-stable but it is an instrument that feels like it is alive. Not a single Minimoog sounds identical. Every single one has their own character. It is a timeless beauty.
Still have my 1972 Mini! Bought it directly from Bob over the phone. 😎 Added tuning LED’s to the panel & a keyboard output to run 2 mini’s from one keyboard (in 73). Still have them. 👍
Hans Zimmer once said "I had to chose between a Minimoog or a car. I chose the Moog, and I still don't drive today". Lmao!
@til-kn9qi
5 жыл бұрын
Jacob flores weird... Martyn Ware from the early Human League and Heaven 17 said the same
@Christof_Classen
5 жыл бұрын
*Now i know why i dont have a Car ;)*
@Jimbo386000
4 жыл бұрын
Jacob flores honestly I would choose the same. Hahaha
@djshumon
4 жыл бұрын
Spent most of my money on audio equipment and still buying at 41 years of age.i didnt pass my driving till i was 27 and didnt have a car till 10 years later.
@IETCHX69
4 жыл бұрын
Not to show off , but the cat assembled it , *ON HIS LUNCH BREAK* , but NOT to showboat , mindja .
We need more interviews with this Bill Hemsath guy. Dude's a hidden legend.
2:50 is, to my ears, the finest sound to ever be synthesized on this legendary machine. That Numan performance is legendary.
@IETCHX69
4 жыл бұрын
What he said .
What a great introduction: "Hello, you don't know who i am. And really, why would that matter..." :D
@Gynecologist
3 жыл бұрын
Blinki18284 😂😂😂😂😂
1971 was also when the clockwork orange was released as a film, with a score by wendy carlo's which used the moog modular.
I can't believe how much the narrator sounds like a computer-generated voice. Simply awesome.
@ronaldderonde
4 жыл бұрын
Erich Izdepski His voice also through a discrete filter.
well done. Thanks - I met Bob at lecture in the physics of sound he gave at McMaster University in 1972. He had a great personality, smiled most of the time and meant it. I learned everything about Synths from him and his inventions. Truly great person.
While I'm a bit disappointed that Herb Deutsch wasn't mentioned, I'm glad to have learned about Bill Hemsath, an engineer I wasn't previously aware of.
A great short documentary about the Minimoog. Dr. Robert Moog, no less a trailblazer than Leo Fender ~!
To all staff at Moog. Thanks. I just love it and I can’t find words to tell you what these instruments meant to me.
Could you imagine if they didn't make that calculation error? That changed music forever. Now all the filters you hear can do those huge sweeps. Maybe today the synthesizer would be considered a subtle instrument rather than the beast it is if it wasn't for that error.
It was pretty cool that they featured Gary Numan’s “Are friends electric” the mini moog sounds fantastic in that song same as in “Cars” by Gary Numan as well!.
@franka.spencer4314
4 жыл бұрын
Cars used a Poly...
@vampoftrance
Жыл бұрын
Listen to " Down In The Park" its very relevant
I'm a fan of keyboards since I was a kid, something that I enjoyed as much as I could thru the hands of Emerson, Lake & Palmer and Rick Wakeman. Throughout all these years I silently had one eye for this fantastic piece of electronic engineering called Minimoog. This report is more than just. Congratulations for the creator!!!
Nice video with excellent, relevant historical clips.
I love watching this video. Thank you guys from Moog Music Inc for sharing it. You made my day!
Facinating, especially from 4:10 to the end. Thanks Bill.
"Hello. You don't know who I am." Magnificent.
On point production and direction to go with the Minimoog's 70's character! As intended, I felt like I was watching a 70's documentary. Perfect choice with the narrator and great touch with that Mac hand-up!
this is the ultimate vintage synth got mine since 1996 and i love it
I've got the goosebumps just watching this.
@GoFlyYourselves
4 жыл бұрын
you mean the moogbumps? niiiiice! 😁👍
@isaisanchez3038
3 жыл бұрын
Me too
"Hello, you don't know who I am, and really, why would that matter when I am surrounded by such elegant machines such as these." lol
i love this video - love the narrator's passion...
Wow, this was a really great mini-doc! Very heart warming for us folks that feel an intimate connection to these machines. Keep doing what you all do, someday I hope to own a Moog Voyager so that I may fly into space.
Just like the Mini Moog, so much packed in so little space! Awesome mini doc! :D
Excellent post! I get all misty-eyed when I watch things like this. It's amazing how this assortment of tech geeks spearheaded an entire musical movement...
The sound of a synth back then really wowed me! I loved it. I spent a good deal of my 1970s record budget on LPs which featured synths - ELP, Yes etc. My favourites were Pink Floyd of course. Wish You Were Here is still my no. 1 favourite album. There are parts which still make my blood tingle. The Beatles had some small synth parts on their last two LPs. Wonder what they might've done if they'd carried on until 1975. Maybe nothing; we'll never know.
Joe Silva, the anonymous narrator, gets high points from me, for bringing a Macintosh 128K into the frame as a representation of "the Google Machine". And a nice video about the Minimoog.
Moog is my favorite channel now!!!
That photo of Bill Hemsath is the best thing I've seen all day.
couldnt agree more -- totally riveting and appreciated!!
I had a mini moog in 1973. Never forget it. Led me to much more over my lifetime.
Very very clever people who changed the sound of music.
Thank you Sir. I really enjoyed watching this.
We accidentally overdove the filter “like crazy”, but we didn’t know it till we were in production and we were like, “No, No! leave it in!” what a happy accident for such a sound. And that add- “Once YOU have THE Sound, you don’t have to talk about it so much.” Perfect catch phrase. NOW PLAY THE DAMN SYNTH!!! LOL!
A splendid programme chaps.......
Made my day seeing that clip of RTF. Haven't heard them in decades.
both parts are amazing! worth to watch! FR
Amazing. Truly truly amazing.
I'm surprised you didn't mention Jan Hammer - he was the first jazz fusion artist I was aware of who was playing leads on a MiniMoog. The Mahavishnu Orchestra album Birds of Fire may be the first successful "jazz" album featuring the Mini. It was followed shortly by Between Nothingness and Eternity, recorded live later that year (1973). Both of these albums predate Chick Corea's first album featuring Minimoog and Arp Odyssey synths, Where Have I Known You Before, which was released in 1974. Corea has mentioned that he was very strongly influenced by Mahavishnu, and that influence is fairly obvious in his early synth work. Jan Hammer released a solo album a year later (The First Seven Days), which, in my mind, cements his legacy as the definitive progenitor of jazz fusion synth soloing.
When Moog started out there were many means of making noises and music by electronics - none of them simple or within reach of someone outside a lab or a Uni music department. Bob Moog's greatest contribution was the Logarithmic Voltage Control which simplified banking of oscillators to turn nice noises in to great music - he then went on to create the Ladder Filter which gave Moog synths their WOW Factor. A great man, a great inventor and a great pioneer of modern music. He deserves his place in Music (and Electronic ) Heaven. RIP.
Great video! Very well done.
Love the Moog sound!!!
Superb video, superb synth.... Just great
This is an excellent video
THX for this Upload ! Great mini-doc :)
I love how their mistakes became their sound!! Just like music with happy accidents. Tiered something else at play when things like that happen.
Ugh now I need a minimoog! So dope!
Loved it! Left out my Mentor ...Sun Ra. Who held the Down Beat poll top synth spot till he transmitted back to space .
Thanks for the information, it was interesting.
SO NICE!
Nicely done. I could watch hours of that stuff, so feel free to make more on my behalf whenever you have the time. Thanks.
3:55 I still don't understand how the modular moog went from so huge to such a tiny thing... I get that the original modular moog is much MUCH more powerful and can do way more things... but what exactly did they sacrifice and leave out? Because the mini-moog sounds fricking amazing. I just don't get what was left out to make it literally 15-20 times smaller!!
@sunnypedaal
7 ай бұрын
Pretty much , many modules and number of modules . Only 3 osc, 1 only lpf, filterbank, seq,2 limited eg etc . On the modular you b.e. Have hp , lp, coupler which takes a bit of space Etc They only choose for what most people used .
Awesome.Thank you.
Richard wakeman and Keith emmerson are my favourite players. I love the sound of so many keyboard songs like Gary numan. Even ozzy and sabbath have great Moog
inspirational! Thank you so much! Moog Music Inc. Justin X
OMG that program is great!
I love the narrator's subtle humour!
Fantastic atmosphere. .
Bill Hemsath, the inventor of the Minimoog, done in his lunch breaks, mind you. Later on, put together with input from Bob Moog and Wendy Carlos. God save you Bill Scott for overdriving the filter and Bill Hemsath for using discrete transistors throughout the whole audio path.
4:20 Bill Hemsath is a GOD thank you! I also love hearing stories from our later generations. But it's funny you can tell they cut out parts, like how he explained EXACTLY how to get to his office.... Bill we don't need to know where your office was. JUST TELL US HOW YOU MADE IT!!!
@djshumon
4 жыл бұрын
No human can be compared to god.thats god given talent and therfore his doing gods work..
Christ, it's an 8 minute long "Brief History of the Minimoog" and people are grousing about which performers they left out of it? Tough crowd.
@awaken77
5 жыл бұрын
there was list of musical compositions in which Minimoog was used in Wikipedia, but it was deleted , when it became few hundreds of entries
@IlluminovaNibiru
5 жыл бұрын
mysterysurf lol
@Oneness100
4 жыл бұрын
They left out probably the most influential, Jan Hammer. Jan was first to use the pitch wheel to mimic a guitar, his pitch wheel technique is copied by EVERYONE else that uses a pitch wheel. PERIOD. He should be listed as the King of the Minimoog. He was one of the first to use it as a lead instrument with the 1972 Birds of Fire recording but he was already using the thing live in concerts prior to that recording.
@jameshenry2457
4 жыл бұрын
I was almost ready to gripe too. Until I caught myself and noted that this is about "mini" moogs. Not modular moogs.
@hullinstruments
3 жыл бұрын
Oneness100 I’ve been wondering about this because I hardly see him mentioned anywhere in all of these videos of synth history.
The Minimoog REALLY feels home in Jazz and Funk. To me is is THE most definitive 70s sound. The smooth playful and just happy and comforting sounding leads are just absolutely perfect in these genres. Just as much as the Minimoog's creates mighty bass sounds that enriches every piece of electronic music with a VERY distinguishable layer that you can feel in your tummy. If Music is the Bread, then the Minimoog is the Butter. ^_^
ahhhhh ... but now I know who you are Mr Silva, and I'll be keeping my out for you. Great intro to Minimoog history 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
thank you!!! great info!!!
Great video!
This video is very educational 😎
I'm glad they gave props to Chick Corea for popularizing the pitch bend wheel, but multiple sources cite Jan Hammer as being the first one to use pitch bend on a recording, Mahavishnu Orchestra's Birds of Fire in 1973. He was the first one to really master its use and play the synth with guitar phrasing.
Great video , thank you !
@clarencecoster1019
5 жыл бұрын
I have a friend who had a mini prodigy the only one I have ever seen does anyone no about this instrument and how much did it cost and when did it come out it was like a mini mini moog
Dr. Moog Cosmic Genius.
Moog is my favorite keyboard 🎹 I want one! Love the bass.
Excelente documento histórico.
Insightful!
That "HELLO" @ 00:36 came out of nowhere! LOL :)
@ChristianIce
6 жыл бұрын
LOL I did read the comment before that happened, yet he scared the shit out of me anyway :D
AMAZING!
Wow! Thanks!
I LOVE IT !
God Bless, Doctor Bob!!!
Love it ! ♡♡♡
I can't believe I've been calling this a MOOG for 15 years, when it's actually pronounced like MOAG..... my life has been turned upside down!
@TryptychUK
6 жыл бұрын
"Don't be vogue, ask for Moog..."
@Laubzeck
4 жыл бұрын
say just under 50 yrs here ... always called it "Mooge" and not "Mogue"
@rohopo
4 жыл бұрын
In high school one of my nicknames was Boog. I knew of Moog, but had no idea how to pronounce it. Me and a friend of mine built a synth and called it the Boog Moog. No I realize that the name doesn't quite work. Still, we're sticking with it!
@theantipope4354
4 жыл бұрын
Same, but 40 years. lol
@NZsaltz
4 жыл бұрын
@@rohopo Well, now people are actually calling the Behringer Model D the Boot!
Well done.
Amazing story
Very nice!
I think my all-time favourite musician in regards to these new electronic inventions is Jean Michel Jarre, that man is a legend when it comes to synthesizers and new technology used to create music that is absolutely out of this world. I think it was he that truly kicked off this digital revolution, starting back in the 70s, and he still going strong 50 years later, my favourite being his laser harp, simple technology, but absolutely stunning to watch and to hear! If you’ve never heard of him, you can find a lot of videos on KZread, listen to it and you’ll see what I mean. I don’t think he ever uses conventional musical instruments, everything is synthesizers of every possible make you can imagine, plus several that he himself invented.
still love it!!
i got one since 1995 and i love it is just a dream that synth
1971 is the best year ever.....because I was born that year! yes. score!
@the80386
9 жыл бұрын
My home country was also born in the end of that year!
Been interested in synths my whole life, and just learned recently that Bob Moog is credited with inventing the VCO and the envelope generator. This man almost singlehandedly built the entire foundation upon which all electronic music is based. Insane when you think about it.
@sunnypedaal
7 ай бұрын
Not exactly the envelopegenerator , but the accesible synthesizer yes
makes the best sound ever!
Very nice video, thank you =)
you rock Bill tks for the minimoog
Thank you Bill Hemsath
I don’t even play keyboards, but the mini moog made me wish I did.
Hail to this incredible instrument.
best and informative....
just order my Minimoog Maple electric blue :D SO STOKED!!!
@thingfish000
3 жыл бұрын
Nice!
Dear MoogMusic, Please bring back the Minimoog Model D. It still reigns supreme today.
I've wanted to own a moog since I was 12. Ideally, I want a Moog-modular, but I might settle for a minimoog. They're just such beautiful beautiful instruments.
This video needs Bernie Worrell. Its great that Bill Hemsath is featured. Way to give credit!