Multimoog

The Multimoog is a monophonic analog synthesizer manufactured by Moog Music from 1978 to 1981. Derived from the earlier Micromoog (internally, it consists of a stock Micromoog circuit board with the extra circuitry on a second board), the Multimoog was intended to be a less expensive alternative to the Minimoog. It nevertheless had some advanced features which the Minimoog did not—most notably, it was one of the earliest synthesizers to feature aftertouch capability.

Multimoog
ManufacturerMoog Music
Dates1978–81
Technical specifications
PolyphonyMonophonic
TimbralityMonotimbral
Oscillator2
LFO1 square/triangle/random (sample & hold), 0.5-30 Hz
Synthesis typeAnalog subtractive
Filter1 low-pass, 24db/oct, 1 AR envelope
Attenuator1 AR envelope
Storage memorynone
Effectsnone
Input/output
Keyboard44 keys
Left-hand controlRibbon controller
mod wheel
External controlCV/Gate

Key features include:

  • 44-note monophonic keyboard with aftertouch
  • ribbon-type pitch bend controller
  • "glide" (portamento)
  • 2 voltage-controlled oscillators with waveform continuously adjustable from sawtooth, through square, to narrow pulse
  • oscillator sync
  • noise source
  • 24db/octave Moog transistor-ladder lowpass voltage controlled filter
  • dedicated low frequency oscillator with triangle, square, and random waveforms
  • extensive modulation routing options, including sample & hold, audio-frequency modulation of the VCF for quasi-ring modulation, waveform sweep/quasi-pulse width modulation, and more
  • 2 AR (attack/release) envelope generators with switchable percussive/sustaining profiles
  • external audio input for processing instruments, vocals, etc.
  • external control voltage and trigger inputs/outputs for interfacing with other synthesizer equipment

See also

Further reading

  • "Moog Multimoog retrospective". Music Technology. Vol. 6 no. 4. March 1992. ISSN 0957-6606. OCLC 24835173.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.