moog prices to skyrocket on egay

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http://www.billboard.com/bb/daily/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1001018893

Electronic Music Pioneer Moog Dies At 71

By Lars Brandle, London

Bob Moog, inventor of his namesake range of synthesizers and one of the most significant figures in the evolution of electronic music, died yesterday (Aug. 21) at his home in Asheville, N.C. He was 71. A native of N.Y., Moog was diagnosed with brain cancer in late April and had since undergone radiation treatment and chemotherapy.

After a decade of building theremins with his father, Moog created his prototype, the Moog Modular Synthesizer, in 1963 and unveiled it the following year at the Audio Engineering Society Convention.

Among the first popular recorded music albums to feature the instrument was Wendy Carlos' 1968 release "Switched-On Bach," which sold more than one million copies and earned the artist three Grammys. Moog himself received a Grammy Trustees Award for lifetime achievement in 1970.

"[Moog] contributed to a new soundscape -- a legacy that we will continue in his honor," comments Mike Adams, president of N.C.-based Moog Music. "He was a musical pioneer for the love of it and musicians everywhere have had the opportunity to expand their own creative horizons with Bob's inventions."

An icon in electronic music circles, Moog was the focus of a Hans Fjellestad-directed documentary, "Moog," which was issued last year by Plexifilm. He was due to deliver the keynote speech at the upcoming Amsterdam Dance Event, to be held Oct. 27-29, but was forced to cancel his appearance shortly after his diagnosis.

Moog's family has established the Bob Moog Foundation, a charity dedicated to the advancement of electronic music. A host of his collaborators, including Carlos and Yes' Rick Wakeman, will sit on its board.

He is survived by his wife, Ileana, and five children. No public memorial is planned.
 
theramin...
LOTHAR.jpg
 
I've wanted to build a theremin for a while but I'm not sure if I have all the parts, and my meager budget is currently devoted to vinyl and bus fare.
 
Thanatopsis123 said:
You need to work at a newspaper so awesome headlines like that can be published.
i wouldn't mind that actually, and others have said that before.

personally i still chuckle slightly at my rick james headline/eulogy: "i'm dead bitch."
 
Thanatopsis123 said:
You need to work at a newspaper so awesome headlines like that can be published.

Been saying this for a while, but damn, wouldn't this just rule? That's the kind of thing I'd make clippings of and cover my fridge with.
 
I've never thought about it... but that man is responsible for a lot of my time spent. RIP good sir, RIP indeed.
 
haha

I want to work at the Weekly World News.

49375.jpg

NEW UNDIES TURN DUDS INTO STUDS


By ROMAN LYNCH

A UROLOGIST has invented a device that may well give erectile drugs a run for their money -- underpants that cure impotence.

"I guarantee that any man who wears my shorts will find his 'love soldier' standing at attention immediately," says London's Dr. Hartwell G. Mapely.

"I can't reveal how it works, of course. But I will say that it involves minute electrical pulses that provide a foolproof stimulus."

At $49.95 a pair, the 55-year-old doctor has raked in millions since he started selling his invention on the internet -- but customers are less than pleased.

"Yeah, the underpants work alright," says one irate customer who asks to remain anonymous. "As long as you have them on, you're harder than Chinese arithmetic. But the second you take them off, you're back to being Mr. Softee. What good does that do my girlfriend -- or my wife for that matter?"

Despite numerous complaints to the British Department of Consumer Protection (BDCP), officials say their hands are tied.

Says a BDCP spokesman: "We took a close look at Dr. Mapley's Web site, and can find no evidence that he misrepresents his product. He simply says that wearing his undies will have the desired effect, which is entirely true."

"Some people have nothing better to do with their time but complain," says Mapely.

Published on: 08/20/2005