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Minimoog’s missing link: how an icon was born in summer of 1970


How did the Minimoog take shape – and set the course of synthesizer and musical instrument history? Among many revelations in JoE Silva’s The Minimoog Book for BJOOKS, we learn how the synth’s early prototypes evolved into the instrument we know today. Read the excerpt here.

minimoogbook cover

Michelle Moog-Koussa collected a crucial document that provides a missing link in that story. It’s about the transformation of the Model B into the Model C – the evolution of the panel into the iconic design that has shaped synths to this day. But it’s about more than that. You see the collaboration of Bob Moog with Bill Hemsath. You get a greater sense of Bob’s vision for the instrument and synths more broadly – looking to horizons even beyond those the Minimoog would reach. And you get to see the thought process as the instrument came into being.

“When you hold it in your hands, there is an undeniable sense of the extraordinary historical significance held within its pages,” Michelle told me about the document.

It’s also a perfect example of the importance of the Bob Moog Foundation. Their archival and educational work reaches across music, engineering, science, and creativity. And it’s a testament to Michelle’s vision and dedication, too – and why we’re indebted to her as well as her father.

You can support that work. As I write this, there’s another 24 hours or so to enter the Bob Moog Foundation raffle for a unique $20,000 Eurorack modular system and some other prizes. Or any time you can try membership and the shop.

And if you’re quick, you can get a signed copy of The Minimoog Book signed by JoE Silva:





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