Carolina Home + Garden Magazine | The Daughter of Invention
Michelle Moog-Koussa didn’t know much about her famous father’s legacy until Robert Moog, inventor of the the first commercial synthesizer, died in 2005.
“My father always held his career at arm’s length from the family, so I had very, very little exposure to ‘Bob Moog’ as a kid and even as an adult,” she says. “When he was sick, and when he passed away, we received thousands of testimonials from people all over the world attesting to how he had changed or even transformed their lives.”
Moogmentum Wows Attendees with Celebration of Music, History, Creativity and Innovation
On August 13 -15, 2019, the Bob Moog Foundation celebrated the grand opening of the Moogseum through Moogmentum, a series of musical and historical events reflecting on Bob Moog’s pioneering legacy in synthesis and his many inspirations. The celebration was held in...Announcing Our Fall 2019 Raffle for Vintage Memorymoog Plus Signed and Played by Dr. Fink of The Revolution
CONGRATULATIONS TO RYAN PAK OF ORANGE, CA, THE WINNER OF THE 2O19 MEMORYMOOG RAFFLE! OUR 2019 RAFFLE for the Memorymoog Plus HAS ENDED. Many thanks to over 1,500 people from around the world who participated. The winner will be announced on Thursday, September 26th....Atlas Obscura | Moogseum: A Museum Dedicated to the Legacy of Bob Moog and His Pioneering Synthesizers
Robert Arthur Moog, better known as Bob, was an American engineer best known for his work with synthesizers and electronic music. Moog didn’t invent the synthesizer, but he did revolutionize it. Before Bob, synthesizers were huge, unwieldy machines that took up an entire room and cost far too much to make them commercially viable.