Switched-On: The Birth of the Moog Synthesizer
The History Center in Tompkins County Debuts
Bob Moog Exhibition
Bob Moog and Jonathan Weiss, mid-1960s
Click for larger image
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Ithaca, NY - April 2014... The History Center in Tompkins County, in partnership with the
Bob Moog Foundation, has announced the opening of the exhibition Switched-On:
The Birth of the Moog Synthesizer.
Illustrating the story of Dr. Robert Moog and the creation and
evolution of the groundbreaking electronic instruments bearing his name, Switched-On:
The Birth of the Moog Synthesizer provides museum visitors
with a wide-ranging, interactive insight into Dr. Moog's inventions and the
creative process behind their design and development.
Based on interviews with family members, colleagues, and
contemporaries, including Herbert Deutsch, Bernie Worrell, Shirleigh
Moog, David Borden, and many more, the exhibition provides a unique view
into the creative genius of Bob Moog, one of the founding fathers of modern
electronic music. With rare Moog instruments such as a vacuum tube theremin, a
Trumansburg-era Minimoog, and one of only three R. A. Moog Company PMS-15
amplifiers ever sold, Switched-On: The Birth of the Moog Synthesizer will
be the first major exhibition on Bob Moog and Moog Synthesizers to occur in the
region, and will run through May 31st, 2015.
R A Moog Co PMS-15 Amplifier Click for larger image
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Robert Moog came to Ithaca, NY in 1957 to begin his PhD work at
Cornell University. He founded the R.A. Moog, Co. in the late 1950s, selling
theremins and theremin kits throughout Ithaca. In 1963, Moog opened a
storefront for his small factory in nearby Trumansburg, NY. It was there that
the Moog modular synthesizer and the iconic Minimoog were born. The factory
grew to become a mainstay in the region until Moog sold the company in 1971,
and the new owners moved it to Williamsville, NY.
Switched-On: The Birth of the Moog Synthesizer tells the story of Moog's Trumansburg years, through
the oral histories of those who knew him, worked with him, and shared his path
in shaping a revolution in sound, technology, and music.
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