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> close yet far, i need help
ride.the.bus
post Jul 21 2006, 07:20 PM
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could anybody tab the moogs for close yet far? i know someone on here said they could play it. i trried for like a week to figure it out but i eat shit a figuring stuff out (IMG:style_emoticons/default/laugh.gif)
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Prime Time In Hi-Fi
post Jul 21 2006, 08:21 PM
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they have moogs on that song?
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fuCKYou259
post Jul 21 2006, 08:53 PM
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deja vu?
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mÅttookÅy
post Jul 22 2006, 01:32 AM
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u cant figure it out in a week? it took me like 10 seconds literally but im not tabbing it out. its all on the high D string (if you are down a step) if that helps

This post has been edited by mattookay: Jul 22 2006, 01:33 AM
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Attila
post Jul 22 2006, 02:10 AM
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Iv'e been wondering what a moog is. Thats a question.
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Prime Time In Hi-Fi
post Jul 22 2006, 02:19 AM
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QUOTE(Attila @ Jul 22 2006, 12:10 AM) *

Iv'e been wondering what a moog is. Thats a question.



according to Wikipedia it's like piano synths..
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moog_synthesizer
Moog synthesizers were one of the first widely used electronic musical instruments. Robert Moog created the first subtractive synthesizer to utilize a keyboard as a controller in 1964 and demonstrated it at the AES convention. It sometimes took hours to set up the machine for a new sound.

Robert Moog employed his theremin company (R. A. Moog Co., which would later become Moog Music) to manufacture and market his synthesizers. They were shipped with an organ-style keyboard as the standard user interface. The Moog was not necessarily considered a performance instrument, but rather a sophisticated, studio-oriented professional audio system which could be used as a musical instrument; the keyboard was simply a convenient and familiar way to control it. Particularly because of the pitch instability of its oscillators as well as the atonal nature of electronic music of the time, the original Moog synthesizer was designed for creating recorded electronic music. Later modular Moogs would have much-improved oscillators and were better suited to real-time musical performance.


Minimoog Model DThe first Moog instruments were modular synthesizers. In 1971 Moog Music began production of the Minimoog Model D which was among the first widely available, portable and relatively affordable synthesizers. Unlike the modular synthesizer, the Minimoog was specifically designed as a self-contained musical instrument for keyboard players (besides the extremely user-friendly physical design, it also stayed in tune reasonably well) and was the first to really solidify the synthesizer's popular image as a "keyboard" instrument. The Minimoog became the most popular monophonic synthesizer of the 1970s, selling approximately 13,000 units between 1971 and 1982.

Another widely used and extremely popular Moog synthesizer was the Taurus bass pedal synthesizer. Released in 1975, its pedals were similar in design to organ pedals and triggered synthetic bass sounds. The Taurus was known for a "fat" bass sound and was used by musicians such as Genesis, Rush, U2, Yes, The Police, Pink Floyd and many others. Production of the original was discontinued in 1981, when it was replaced by the Taurus II.

Moog Music was the first company to commercially release a keytar, the Moog Liberation.

The last Moog synthesizers were manufactured in 1985 before the original Moog Music declared bankruptcy in 1986. In 2001, Robert Moog's company Big Briar was able to acquire the rights to the Moog name and officially became Moog Music. (See Moog Music.) Moog Music has been producing the Minimoog Voyager, modeled after the original Minimoog, since 2002.

In March of 2006, Moog Music unveiled the Little Phatty Analog Synthesizer, boasting "hand-built quality and that unmatched Moog sound, at a price every musician can afford". The first limited edition run of 1200 will be a Bob Moog Tribute Edition with a Performer edition soon to be announced.

[edit]
Moog synthesizers in culture
According to the American Physical Society, "The first live performance of a music synthesizer was made by pianist Paul Bley at Lincoln Center in New York City on December 26, 1969. Bley developed a proprietary interface that allowed real time performance on the music synthesizer."

It is believed that the first phonograph record to feature a Moog synthesizer was Cosmic Sounds by The Zodiac. The first popular music album to feature the instrument was 1967's Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn, & Jones, Ltd. by The Monkees. Wendy Carlos (formerly Walter Carlos) released major Moog albums in 1968 and 1969: Switched-On Bach and The Well-Tempered Synthesizer. The former earned Carlos three Grammys. Also in 1969, The Beatles used a Moog throughout the Abbey Road album. It was also featured prominently on Emerson, Lake & Palmer's song "Lucky Man," Keith Emerson's Moog solo at the end making it arguably the group's most popular piece. Another famous use of the Moog was in Tangerine Dream's electronic landmark album Phaedra in 1974. Glenn Tilbrook, a member of the new wave band Squeeze, was also known to use the Mini Moog with regularity.

The success of Carlos' Switched-On Bach sparked a series of other synthesizer records in the late 1960s to mid 1970s. These albums featured covers of songs arranged for Moog synthesizer in the most dramatic and flamboyant way possible, covering rock, country and other genres of music. The albums often had "Moog" in their titles (i.e. Country Moog Classics, Exotic Moog with Martin Denny, etc.) although many used a variety of other brands of synthesizers and even organs as well. The kitsch appeal of these albums continue to have a small fanbase and the 1990s band Moog Cookbook is a tribute to this style of music.

One well known use of the synthesizer was in the 1971 movie A Clockwork Orange, in which Carlos wrote all the original music for the Moog, along with several Moog versions of classical music, creating a very eerie mood that was considered very successful at expressing the strange society of the movie.

A popular Moog user (and programmer) is Stevie Wonder who won numerous Grammy awards in 1973 for his synthesizer rich Talking Book and also in 1974 where he grabbed the 'Album of the Year' award with yet another Moog-tinted album Innervisions.

Popularity surged in the 1970s, then declined in the 1980s as digital synthesizers gained traction in the market. By the mid-1990s, analog synthesizers were again highly sought after and prized for their classic sound. As of 2004, more than 15 companies are making Moog-style synthesizer modules
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Jules McCrackin
post Jul 22 2006, 02:21 AM
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that's a lie. moogs are really big poops.
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zeroskater27
post Jul 22 2006, 02:40 AM
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hahahahahaha
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1suffer_unto_me
post Jul 22 2006, 06:35 AM
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I pronounce it like it's spelt, "moogs", but apparently it's pronounced "mougues" or something...I heard Deron say it the way I do though so I don't care, haha.

QUOTE(Prime Time In Hi-Fi @ Jul 21 2006, 08:21 PM) *

they have moogs on that song?


There are moogs on every, or almost every, song on IDR. On Close Yet Far it's the bit over the intro that isn't a guitar (at least, that's where I hear it). Sounds pretty easy to play to me.
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guitar
post Jul 22 2006, 01:58 PM
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Bass, Drums, etc.


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ooooo-eee-oooo-ee-oooo-ee-wahhhhh-wahhhh-woooo-wahhhh

There that's it.
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Ferguson
post Jul 22 2006, 02:01 PM
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dude thats so easy to just learn it by ear
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Dwight Lightning
post Jul 22 2006, 02:07 PM
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QUOTE(aaaron @ Jul 22 2006, 01:21 AM) *

that's a lie. moogs are really big poops.

when i read tht that was the first time i have ever laughed out loud reading the boards
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Davies
post Aug 8 2006, 06:32 AM
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Haha, I joined the forum to reply to this, hey everyone!

Assuming you want to play it just like Chad does live, I'll tab it like that. There are many other ways to play it that sound fine, but if you have a rudimentary knowledge of octaves on the guitar, steps & semitones et cetera, you'll easily be able to work those out. This is exactly how Chad plays it live.

Tuning: 1 step down (Low to High: DGCFAd)

~ = Vibrato
/ = Slide up
\ = Slide down


d|-7~--5~--8/10--7~--8--10/12~--10/12~--10--7~--8--10/12~--10/12~--10---7~--7~--5~--3~----
A|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
F|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
G|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Marjax
post Aug 8 2006, 10:47 AM
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QUOTE(1suffer_unto_me @ Jul 22 2006, 07:35 AM) *

I pronounce it like it's spelt, "moogs", but apparently it's pronounced "mougues" or something...I heard Deron say it the way I do though so I don't care, haha.

Pronounced "mohgs," because that's how Robert Moog pronounced his last name. Say it like the name Moe, but add a g at the end.
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Prime Time In Hi-Fi
post Aug 8 2006, 09:20 PM
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QUOTE(Davies @ Aug 8 2006, 04:32 AM) *

Haha, I joined the forum to reply to this, hey everyone!

Assuming you want to play it just like Chad does live, I'll tab it like that. There are many other ways to play it that sound fine, but if you have a rudimentary knowledge of octaves on the guitar, steps & semitones et cetera, you'll easily be able to work those out. This is exactly how Chad plays it live.

Tuning: 1 step down (Low to High: DGCFAd)

~ = Vibrato
/ = Slide up
\ = Slide down


d|-7~--5~--8/10--7~--8--10/12~--10/12~--10--7~--8--10/12~--10/12~--10---7~--7~--5~--3~----
A|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
F|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
G|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



this may be a bit o/t.. but how do you tune a step down.. i use one of those electric tuners where the ball of light bounces back and forth and i've never been able to figure out how to tune a notch down.
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1suffer_unto_me
post Aug 8 2006, 10:37 PM
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QUOTE(Marjax @ Aug 8 2006, 10:47 AM) *

Pronounced "mohgs," because that's how Robert Moog pronounced his last name. Say it like the name Moe, but add a g at the end.


Yeah, I just sucked at typing that out phonetically.

QUOTE(Prime Time In Hi-Fi @ Aug 8 2006, 09:20 PM) *

this may be a bit o/t.. but how do you tune a step down.. i use one of those electric tuners where the ball of light bounces back and forth and i've never been able to figure out how to tune a notch down.


It's easiest to do it by ear using the open D string as ypur first point of reference, or similar. It gets easier the longer you've been playing for - I can tune by ear pretty damn close these days.
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mÅttookÅy
post Aug 9 2006, 01:47 AM
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with your tuner it should say what note the string is... this is what it should say when its a step down going from the lowest pitch string... DGCFAD
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Davies
post Aug 9 2006, 02:25 PM
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QUOTE(Prime Time In Hi-Fi @ Aug 9 2006, 03:20 AM) *

this may be a bit o/t.. but how do you tune a step down.. i use one of those electric tuners where the ball of light bounces back and forth and i've never been able to figure out how to tune a notch down.
Assuming you already know how to tune up to standard with an electric tuner, it's the same principle as that. If you are tuned a step down, the 2nd fret should sound the same as an open string.

So, you tune the strings down until playing a note on the 2nd fret registers the same as an open string in standard. It's real easy.
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