Showing posts with label multimoog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label multimoog. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Moog Retail Price List, June 28, 1980


Moog 2-page fold out Retail Price List from June 28, 1980.

What isn't to love about this price sheet?

A list of awesome Moog synths? Check!  Retail prices for those synth history buffs like me? Yup!  And last but definitely not least, Tom Schuman from Spyro Gyra. No wonder he is smiling, by the time this price list came out, the guy was still barely into his twenties and already had three albums under his belt.

AND he's playing a Moog Liberation keytar. That would definitely make me smile too.

click image for more info
If this photo of Tom appears familiar, it probably means you are old.

Or a fan of vintage synth ads.

Or both.

Because a full colour version appeared in a July 1980 Moog Liberation advertisement, around the same time this price list did. As mentioned in the blog post for that ad, 1980 really was the year that the Keytar broke out.

Which makes it a good year indeed.

As mentioned above, as a synth history buff, I love to see prices listed. Most ads don't include prices and its like a puzzle missing one of the most important pieces.  I've posted a few other Moog price lists (with more to come!) and its fun (and a little terrifying) to watch inflation unfold.
click image for more info

For example, The July 1, 1974 Moog Retail Price List contains some of the same products, and I've included a few of those below for comparison. 

Minimoog:
1974 - $1,595.00
1980 - $1,995.00

Percussion Controller:
1974 - $249.00 
1980 - $350.00

Ribbon Controller:
1974 - $295.00
1980 - $$395.00

click image for more info
Also, the March 1, 1976 Moog Professional Systems Price List gives us a good comparison for their modular systems.

System 15:
1976 - $3,845.00
1980 - $4,960.00

System 35:
1976 - $5,935
1980 - $7,980

System 55:
1976 - $9,675
1980 - $12,000

Time to look for more Keytar ads.

Friday, November 3, 2017

Moog Multimoog synthesizer reference sheet, 1980




Moog Multimoog synthesizer reference sheet from 1980.

I  reference info. The more data the better. And this, and the other reference sheets deliver. Gorgeous photo on one side. Gorgeous info on the other. Yum.

While recently flipping through old blog posts I noticed I never finished off my 1980 Moog reference sheet family. Well, time to fix that!

For someone who gets distracted as easily as I do, I'm surprised I had already managed to get five of them up there, including, in no particular order (click on the images to go to their respective blog posts):

  
  

The Multimoog is probably the Moog synthesizer I'm least familiar with. And at first glance, I had mistaken it for its baby brother - the Micromoog. Looking at the two reference sheets its easy to see why.

And those similarities are not just cosmetic - as noted in the November 1978 Spec Sheet write-up for the Multimoog:
"Moog synthesizer: The Multimoog features two audio oscillators, an LFO, fully variable waveshaping, a 3.5 octave keyboard, switchable single or multiple triggering, a pitchbend ribbon and a modulation wheel. The keyboard also has a force sensor in it, the output of which can be used to control pitch, LFO speed, volume, etc. The Multimoog is basically an expanded version of the Micromoog and features many more open-system features not included on the Micro, such as glide output voltage on-off, ribbon control voltage routing, and keyboard triggering control. Norlin Music. 7373 N. Cicero Ave., Lincolnwood, IL. 60646."
I have to say, I love the variable waveshaping on the Micromoog (waveform control knob that moves gradually from saw through square through narrow pulse waveforms rather than clicking to each individual waveform), and its looks like its implemented the same on the Multi.  Sweet.

One other feature mentioned in the spec sheet got my attention: the "... more open-system features...". A few Google searches later and I'm on Muff Wigglers reading:
"Multimoogs can be chained together. The back panel has a generous I/O system which lets a synth be a master or a slave unit."
Whaaaaaat? Chaining Multimoogs? That's awesome. The back page of the reference sheet does list the jaw-dropping number of in's and out's the Multimoog ha, but unfortunately I couldn't find any videos of two Multimoog's joined together. Dang.

But I think anyone who has been hanging around vintage Moog forums and Web sites will agree its most outstanding feature is it's "force-sensitive" keyboard, now more commonly known as pressure sensitivity. A nice - and rare - feature for a late 1970s synthesizer.

As such, the Multimoog's pressure sensitivity played prominently in the Multimoog's advertising campaigns. Chick Corea called it "a very expressive addition". And the


There are a number of Multimoog video demos on Youtube that show off it's pressure sensitivity nicely. I'll end the blog post with this one. What a lovely growl that Moog filter creates...



Yum!

Monday, July 4, 2011

Moog "Fingers Burned" dealers ad, International Musician 1978



Moog "Fingers Burned" Authorized Moog Synthesizer Dealers 2-page advertisement from pages 98 and 99 in International Musician October 1978 (UK).

Update: added to the Moog interactive advertising timeline.

Friday, July 1 was Canada Day. That makes it a long weekend here in Canada.

To make blogging matters worse, it has been really nice out. I mean *really nice*. And lately, where I'm from, this is no doubt a limited time offer.

In other words, I hope to keep it short. And sweet. :D

And ain't this Moog dealers ad saaaa-weeeeeeet!

There is a lot of historical information packed into this ad - everything from authorized dealer and service info, to the promotion of Moog's new Multimoog.

When I first flip to this ad, my eye is drawn directly to that very hairy arm - even the fingers have hair. The creator of the ad obviously knew this could be a problem for people like me who lack body hair to such a large extent that we are fascinated with anyone that actually needs to shave once a day. So, in order to try and draw readers' eyes more towards the Moog logo, the designer gave it a splash of colour in an otherwise black and white ad. Nice try. :)

The layout is almost confusing at first, and placing the text such that it wraps around the photos normally doesn't help much. Give me nice clean columns any day. But in the case of this ad, bolded subheadings help package up the information nicely, especially on page one. Here, the headings convey the three key dealership messages Moog is trying to get across to those looking to choose a synthesizer - sound advice and the widest choice at the right price.

The second page of the ad gets a little more crazy, where Moog tries to mix some product promo and service tech info in with the dealership stuff. The addition of the product info became even more confusing to me when I read the advert index and found out that Moog included an "8 page loose insert" in this issue, that probably included information on the Multimoog anyways. Unfortunately, loose inserts rarely survive as long as the magazine, so I can't confirm this was the case. But I do know that if they didn't include the Multimoog info in this ad, the added white space probably would have made for a much more enjoyable and organized ad.

As mentioned above, one reason I find this ad historically significant is because it looks like this is the beginning of Moog's attempt at promoting a new "Authorised Moog Synthesiser Dealer" network. I say "beginning" because the advertisement is written in the present tense:
  • "We're training staff"
  • "Every Authorized Dealer will be stocking..."
  • We're training service staff at all our shops..."
So, if the way it is written is historically accurate, it looks like we are are witnessing the start of Norlin's organized attempt to expand it's reach into European markets through a dedicated network of dealers and service staff. Neat-o!

Another cool piece of reference information is the tag-line used with the logo - "the power and the glory". I seem to recall seeing this in some other Moog ads, although I can't put my finger on where, and I couldn't find it in any of the ads I've posted. I'm more familiar with the "people who started it all" or "another quality product from Norlin" tag-lines. When I read this one, my mind immediately connects it to it's religious reference. I guess if anything, it takes balls to try and nick it from the big guy upstairs.

I have to say I also dig the "European quality control seal", with the little check mark next to the "checked" in six different languages. How "international" is that?!

Surprisingly, this ad is not my favorite highlight in this issue of IMRW. It is actually the cover of the magazine issue itself.

In fact, when I first got this magazine, I remember I was a little surprised at what I saw on the front cover, until I remembered this magazine was from 1978.



It's a photo of Francis Rossi from Status Quo lighting a cigarette. Yah, you can kind of see he is holding a guitar, but the cigarette and match are definitely the focus of the photo.

I find it strange how sensitive I've become to smoking imagery. I see smoking so little in ads and movies now that when it does happen, I'm drawn out of the moment. Together with my ever-decreasing attention span, this has become a problem.

For example, I was watching the movie Reality Bites starring my girlfriend Winona Ryder the other day, and reacted to the copious amounts of smoking in that movie in the same way as this cover photo. I was literally pulled out of the movie experience every time a cigarette became visible. In fact, there is so much smoking in that movie that someone should make an anti-smoking drinking game out of it (honestly, I see the irony there, and the increasing problem of addiction in our society). Seriously, though, decades of anti-smoking efforts have ruined this film for me. But at least I still have the My Sharona scene - no smoking there.

Interestingly, my reaction to that cover photo wasn't the most surprising thing about all this. It was actually the surprise of finding an angry letter in the following issue of International Musician:
"As a guitarist and regular reader of International Musician and Recording World, I wish to register my disapproval of the front cover photograph for your October issue (Francis Rossi), which implies that cigarette smoking is fashionable and associated with musical success. I would like to point out that many non-smoking musicians dislike smoke-filled venues, that their health could be at risk through working in such places and that may smoking musicians who want to give up the habit find it more difficult because of the environment in which they perform...."
Although I find it surprising that someone spoke up against the photo back in 1978, I probably shouldn't be. I'm so old now that I always think that everything started just a couple of years ago - Earth Day: Didn't that start in 2009? Seinfeld: 2007? Star Wars: 2006? :D

But that "Smoking makes your teeth yellow/smoking makes your clothes smello" commercial probably is from the 70's, eh?

Yah - tried to find that commercial on YouTube... no-go. Anyone find it for me?

Monday, July 27, 2009

Moog Multimoog, Contemporary Keyboard 1978


Moog Multimoog synthesizer from page 9 of Contemporary Keyboard magazine September 1978.

Great quote in the ad: "And thanks to Moog's philosophy, the music is never a side effect of the sound effects."

The November 1978 issue of Contemporary Keyboard referenced the Multimoog in the 'Spec Sheet' section (page 98) and compared it to its smaller sibling the Micromoog. No price was listed.

Check out the other Multimoog ad featuring Chick Corea.

Some good information is available online at Vintage Synth Explorer.

Thursday, May 7, 2009