Kreeg van de Moog foundation een nieuwsbrief waarin werd geschreven over het openen van de archieven van Bob Moog. Zijn ontwerp van de Moogtonium werd ontdekt. De website is echter direkt offline gegaan (access forbiden).
Vindt nog wel wat flarden op inet:
Here’s the beginning of the story, from the Moog Foundation; click on the link below for the full story:
Uncovering the Moogtonium
nieuwsbrief:
Moogtonium Documentation Discovered in Bob's Archives
As you all know by now, one of our three projects is preserving and protecting Bob's extensive archives. The archives are full of various mediums, but today we focus on letters and schematics that have given way to an exciting discovery about a little known instrument that Bob worked on in 1966.
Visit our website to read the full article on this amazing discovery.
We recently uncovered a stack of letters, notes and schematics describing Bob's work on a version of a Mixture-Trantonium, which he and the musician-collaborator Max Brand deemed the "Moogtonium". You can read much more about this fascinating instrument in a blog post written by Michelle Moog-Koussa, Brian Kehew and Clemens Hausch.
http://moogfoundation.org/2010/from-the-archives-moogtonium-discovered
nog een stukje op inet:
Michelle Moog-Koussa
In January 2009, while combing through Bob’s archives, searching for just the right items to bring to Winter NAMM for our small showcase previewing our upcoming exhibit, Waves of Inspiration: The Legacy of Moog, I came upon a light blue folder with several pockets loaded with documents – letters, schematics and notes. The upper right hand corner of the cover of the folderwas simply marked “Brand”. Inside was a treasure trove of information, much of it coming from meticulously written and technically detailed letters written on translucent typing paper with the name “Max Brand” printed in the top margin, with dates beginning as early as March 1966. A slew of schematics in Bob’s hand were interspersed among these letters, as well as notes describing specifications for what would become known at the Moogtonium, and in some circles, the Max Brand synthesizer. ...
We zullen later ongetwijfeld meer horen.....
Vindt nog wel wat flarden op inet:
Here’s the beginning of the story, from the Moog Foundation; click on the link below for the full story:
Uncovering the Moogtonium
nieuwsbrief:
Moogtonium Documentation Discovered in Bob's Archives
As you all know by now, one of our three projects is preserving and protecting Bob's extensive archives. The archives are full of various mediums, but today we focus on letters and schematics that have given way to an exciting discovery about a little known instrument that Bob worked on in 1966.
Visit our website to read the full article on this amazing discovery.
We recently uncovered a stack of letters, notes and schematics describing Bob's work on a version of a Mixture-Trantonium, which he and the musician-collaborator Max Brand deemed the "Moogtonium". You can read much more about this fascinating instrument in a blog post written by Michelle Moog-Koussa, Brian Kehew and Clemens Hausch.
http://moogfoundation.org/2010/from-the-archives-moogtonium-discovered
nog een stukje op inet:
Michelle Moog-Koussa
In January 2009, while combing through Bob’s archives, searching for just the right items to bring to Winter NAMM for our small showcase previewing our upcoming exhibit, Waves of Inspiration: The Legacy of Moog, I came upon a light blue folder with several pockets loaded with documents – letters, schematics and notes. The upper right hand corner of the cover of the folderwas simply marked “Brand”. Inside was a treasure trove of information, much of it coming from meticulously written and technically detailed letters written on translucent typing paper with the name “Max Brand” printed in the top margin, with dates beginning as early as March 1966. A slew of schematics in Bob’s hand were interspersed among these letters, as well as notes describing specifications for what would become known at the Moogtonium, and in some circles, the Max Brand synthesizer. ...
We zullen later ongetwijfeld meer horen.....