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Oh To Dream of One Moog...

edited August 2019 in Other

Just wow. This synth is so beautiful and sounds amazing

Comments

  • I go play one every few weeks at my local store. Good fun but way too expensive for my taste.

  • @BroCoast said:
    I go play one every few weeks at my local store. Good fun but way too expensive for my taste.

    Good idea. Gotta figure out how to connect SynthJacker to it 😬

  • edited August 2019

    I’d be too afraid of breaking it to ever consider spending retail price on it. From every video I’ve seen, it doesn’t seem like a joy to patch fine details. There’s just something a bit alien about it and its sound. Or could be I’m just unfamiliar with the way opulence sounds.

  • edited August 2019

    Isnt it amazing this exists, the balance between analogue and digital tech available is sweet at the moment.

  • The user and all related content has been deleted.
  • @StudioES said:
    It sure looks and sounds sexy, but will it be a classic in 50 years?
    Or will it be looked how a 1950s air-conditioned lawn mower is today?

    Hihi, i think the answer is yes. The design is classic not futuristic.

  • Polymoogs and CS-80s were in a similar price bracket when they first appeared IIRC...

  • The Prophet 6 strikes a similar top quality analog/digital balance for much less. Not a Moog though 😎

  • @StudioES said:
    It sure looks and sounds sexy, but will it be a classic in 50 years?
    Or will it be looked how a 1950s air-conditioned lawn mower is today?

    Well my take is:

    It's the nicest synth I've ever played as far as interface goes. The keys feel amazing as does the experience of operating the panel.

    Where it falls short for me and similar to the Alesis Andromeda is that while it can sound great, it can sound really average too. You can't get fast awesome sounding basic saw/square patches like on a classic (Jupiter, Memorymoog, CS, Korg PS3XX etc.)

    It is like having a set of almost sharp kitchen knives compared to having a collection of specialised knives that are all razor sharp and perfect for their specific task.

  • @TheOriginalPaulB said:
    Polymoogs and CS-80s were in a similar price bracket when they first appeared IIRC...

    Yeah and that was the price at the time! The $5,295 the Polymoog cost in 1975 is roughly equal to $25,000 today. The $6,900 for the CS-80 in 1976 is roughly $31,000 today. So a Moog One is a steal!

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