Humanizing the machine

Humanizing the machine

On a shared hero, Bob Moog, owner of a great name and inventor of the Moog synthesizer:

See also:
The Moogseum and MOOG, a film by Hans Fjellestad

More than any 20th-century inventor you could name, Moog warmed up the wires and humanised the machine. He was a spiritual man who believed in nothing but material, though he treated matter as a form of energy (which of course it is), one we barely understand. As for his idea that all matter has a residual consciousness … well — beyond the hard-won lesson that if you don’t love machines, they won’t love you back — I’m sceptical. But not only did Moog elaborate this idea with great intellectual sophistication, he set about proving it, up to his elbows in Bessel functions and Fourier transforms and circuitboards. His respect for material allowed him to draw the most beautiful sounds out of the ether; in doing so, Bob Moog simply increased the human expressive range. Some toolmaker.

Indeed.