Harvard University Press
Analog Days
Analog Days
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Though ubiquitous today, available as a single microchip and found in any electronic device requiring sound, the synthesizer when it first appeared was truly revolutionary. Something radically newan extraordinary rarity in musical cultureit was an instrument that used a genuinely new source of sound: electronics. How this came to behow an engineering student at Cornell and an avant-garde musician working out of a storefront in California set this revolution in motionis the story told for the first time in Analog Days, a book that explores the invention of the synthesizer and its impact on popular culture.
The authors take us back to the heady days of the 1960s and early 1970s, when the technology was analog, the synthesizer was an experimental instrument, and synthesizer concerts could and did turn into happenings. Interviews with the pioneers who determined what the synthesizer would be and how it would be usedfrom inventors Robert Moog and Don Buchla to musicians like Brian Eno, Pete Townshend, and Keith Emersonrecapture their visions of the future of electronic music and a new world of sound.
Tracing the development of the Moog synthesizer from its initial conception to its ascension to stardom in Switched-On Bach, from its contribution to the San Francisco psychedelic sound, to its wholesale adoption by the worlds of film and advertising, Analog Days conveys the excitement, uncertainties, and unexpected consequences of a new technology that would provide the soundtrack for a critical chapter of our cultural history.