Fugue in D-moll, BWV 565, by Johann Sebastian Bach
6 minutes 45 seconds
Count Hippotaur had to dig through the dusty archives of his Moog Synthesizer Laboratory in the dungeon of his castle in order to find this ancient recording of the second half of Bach's famous Toccata and Fugue in D-moll. While not the most technically played version he's ever done, he liked the spooky selections of sounds he had used on the ancient Moog synthesizer.
Realized on Moog synthesizer, effects boxes, and reel-to-reel 4-track tape recorder. Best listened to with headphones.
Music composed in 1708 by Johann Sebastian Bach (public domain)
(P) 1982
hippotaur
6 minutes 45 seconds
Listen to ToccataCount Hippotaur had to dig through the dusty archives of his Moog Synthesizer Laboratory in the dungeon of his castle in order to find this ancient recording of the second half of Bach's famous Toccata and Fugue in D-moll. While not the most technically played version he's ever done, he liked the spooky selections of sounds he had used on the ancient Moog synthesizer.
Realized on Moog synthesizer, effects boxes, and reel-to-reel 4-track tape recorder. Best listened to with headphones.
Music composed in 1708 by Johann Sebastian Bach (public domain)
(P) 1982
hippotaur
Category Music / Classical
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 97 x 120px
File Size 9.29 MB
Why thank you very much!
The moog is basically just a bunch of boxes. Each box performs a particular electronic function. You connect them together with wires. Depending on which boxes you connect together which way and how many of whatever boxes your moog system has is what determines the sound.
So it's nothing at all like today's synthesizers that have pre-made sounds to choose from. You have to build each and every sound up from complete scratch!
It's more like a puzzle than a musical instrument LOL !
The moog is basically just a bunch of boxes. Each box performs a particular electronic function. You connect them together with wires. Depending on which boxes you connect together which way and how many of whatever boxes your moog system has is what determines the sound.
So it's nothing at all like today's synthesizers that have pre-made sounds to choose from. You have to build each and every sound up from complete scratch!
It's more like a puzzle than a musical instrument LOL !
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