Analog Days: The Invention and Impact of the Moog SynthesizerHarvard University Press, 30 oct. 2002 - 384 pages 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 new--an extraordinary rarity in musical culture--it was an instrument that used a genuinely new source of sound: electronics. How this came to be--how an engineering student at Cornell and an avant-garde musician working out of a storefront in California set this revolution in motion--is 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. |
Table des matières
Preface xi | |
Discography 325 | |
Sculpting Sound 1 | |
Droits d'auteur | |
13 autres sections non affichées