The Moog Cookbook, 1996
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The Moog Cookbook, 1996

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Hans Zimmer with his Moog Modular, 1970
Moog Subsequent 37, based on the Sub 37 Tribute Edition
Keith Emerson at the Moog Festival in New York
Sequential Circuits Prophet 5 was released in 1978 and was welcomed by many artists at the time, including Rick Wright (Pink Floyd), Bernie Worrell (Parliament), Ozzy Osborne, Berlin, The Eurythmics, and Kraftwerk.
In an interview with Yes keyboardist Rick Wakeman, he listed the Prophet 5/10 as one of his favourite keyboards:
“I was sitting by a pool in Oakland, sometime in 1977. This bloke came over to me and introduced himself as Dave Smith. He said, ‘I’m building a synth’. At first, I didn’t pay much attention. Everybody was building synths in the ‘70s. You could get a synth kit with your monthly electronic project mag. ‘Granny, what are you doing? Making soup?’ ‘No, I’m building a synth.’ But then he told me that this synth was going to be a polyphonic version of the Minimoog. Ah, now that’s interesting.
He pulled out reams and reams of circuit diagrams, which were completely useless to me. Didn’t have a clue what he was on about. I said, ‘If you want to appeal to Minimoog users, you need the layout to look similar’, and I sketched a rough Moog panel on a napkin. Anyway, off he went, and I never expected to hear from him again.
The following year, I was living in Switzerland and this huge parcel turned up on the doorstep. It was one of the very first Prophet 5s with a thank you note from Dave. It had patch memory! You didn’t have to mess around trying to recreate your favourite sounds. Thanks, Dave."
Interview from Music Radar:
https://www.musicradar.com/amp/news/rick-wakeman-on-his-top-5-synths-i-suddenly-had-an-instrument-that-could-give-the-guitar-a-run-for-its-money
“Without synths, I wouldn’t have been able to play the music I wanted to play”

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The Moog One, currently their flagship synthesiser, was the first polyphonic Moog synthesiser released since the SL-8 in 1983 and included new, innovative synthesiser technology.
Combining Moog and ARP synthesisers, TONTO is responsible for creating revolutionary sounds heard on songs from artists like Stevie Wonder, the Isley Brothers, Quincy Jones, the Doobie Brothers, Randy Newman, James Taylor, and Harry Nilsson.
TONTO was created by Malcolm Cecil and Bob Margouleff and was originally housed at Jimi Hendrix's Electric Lady Studios.
Geddy Lee of Rush with his custom MiniMoog/Oberheim hydbrid synthesiser, which featured on Hemispheres and Permanent Waves, 1978
Stevie Wonder, Larry Dunn, Dr. Lonnie Smith, and Bernie Worrell demo the Moog Sub Phatty at NAMM 2013
Moog Rogue advert from Synthesizerstudio Bonn, 1981

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Moog Minitmoog, 1975
Rick Wright setting up his keyboard rig for the Wish You Were Here tour, 1975
Moog Polymoog 203A, released in 1975
MiniMoog advert, 1979
Vangelis at Nemo Studios in London’s Marble Arch, which at its peak was equipped with a Minimoog, SCI Prophet 10, Roland SH3a, Roland Jupiter 4, Roland Promars MRS2 Compuphonic, Roland VP330 Vocoder Plus, Roland System 100, Yamaha CS40M, Yamaha CS80, Fender Rhodes, Elka Rhapsody 610, Roland SH2000, Emulator, Yamaha GS2, Roland Juno 106, Roland CR5000 Compurhythm, Drumulator and a Linn Drum Computer.

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Rick Wright (of Pink Floyd) was one of the early pioneers of synthesisers in pop music, and would perform with an array of classic keyboards, including two MiniMoogs and a Hammond Organ, 1974
Rick Wakeman's keyboard rig for his first solo album, The Six Wives of Henry VIII, 1973
Rick Wakeman used both an original MiniMoog and a custom oscillator for this album.