Author Topic: Dropping Like Flies  (Read 3185112 times)

Jaguär

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #120 on: July 24, 2005, 05:27:00 pm »
Probably only a few of us know who this legend is, let alone care. A real shame because he was great in his day! Even Elton John's contribution was incredibly good...and I can't stand Elton John.
 
 FYI: The 'John' part of Elton John's name came from this man.
 _____________________
 
 LONG JOHN BALDRY 1941-2005
 
 British blues man LONG JOHN BALDRY has died aged 64.
 
 The singer had been fighting a chest infection for four months and passed away yesterday (July 22) at Vancouver General Hospital in British Columbia, Canada, BBC News reports.
 
 Baldry had a single number one hit in 1967 with â??Let The Heartaches Beginâ??, but had been sighted as a strong influence on Eric Clapton, and was friends with Sir Paul McCartney.
 
 A pioneer of British rock n roll, Baldry performed during the early days at the Cavern in Liverpool before going on to work with the likes of Rod Stewart and Elton John, both of whom appeared on his solo album â??It Ain't Easyâ??.
 
 Emigrating to Canada in 1991, Baldry became know for his voice over work and in 1998 won a Grammy nomination for his Disney narration.
 
 He continued to record solo albums, and also played the voice of Sonic The Hedgehogâ??s nemesis Dr Robotnik in the video game.
 ____________________________
 
 This is the album to get (but the cover looks a little different from my LP):
 
  <img src="http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov200/dre600/e680/e68061mv18p.jpg" alt=" - " />
 click me

Jaguär

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #121 on: July 25, 2005, 01:30:00 pm »
Ex-con, crime writer and movie star, Ed Bunker, dies at 71
 
 1 hour, 56 minutes ago
 
 Crime novelist Edward Bunker, who learned to write in prison and appeared in the movie "Reservoir Dogs," has died in hospital in Burbank, California. He was 71.
 
 Bunker, a diabetic, died on July 19 from complications arising from surgery to improve circulation in his legs, the Los Angeles Times reported, citing Bunker's longtime friend, screenwriter Robert Dellinger.
 
 Bunker's hard-boiled and unapologetic crime novels were informed by his personal experiences in a society of criminals in general and by his time in the penal system in particular.
 
 He started on a criminal career at a very early age, and became a repeat prison inmate, serving time for bank robbery, drug dealing, extortion, armed robbery and forgery.
 
 The turning point in his life came with the 1973 publication, while he was still in prison, of "No Beast So Fierce," a novel about a paroled thief whose attempt to reenter mainstream society fails.
 
 When he was paroled in 1975, Bunker, who had spent eighteen years of his life in various institutions, turned his back on the criminal life to earn a living writing and acting.
 
 His other novels dealing with crime and life behind bars included "The Animal Factory," "Little Boy Blue" and "Dog Eat Dog."
 
 As well as Quentin Tarantino's "Reservoir Dogs," in which he played the character Mr. Blue, Bunker also appeared in such movies as "The Running Man," (1982) and "Tango and Cash" (1989).

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #122 on: July 26, 2005, 10:01:00 am »
Quote
Originally posted by Jaguär:
 [QB] His other novels dealing with crime and life behind bars included "The Animal Factory,"
Did anyone see the film version of this?  Tom Arnold was great as an extra-creepy con who stuck his finger upside Edward Furlongs bunghole.  He should have gotten an Oscar nod for that one, IMHO.

hitman

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #123 on: July 26, 2005, 08:06:00 pm »
Yeah..that was a pretty messed up flick, especially when Willem Dafoe started missing shit (fresh from the toilet) with rice and smearing it all over his face.  I felt like I was going to vomit.

Random Citizen

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #124 on: August 07, 2005, 12:32:00 am »
Buena Vista Social Club Singer Ferrer Dies
 By ANITA SNOW, Associated Press Writer
 Saturday, August 6, 2005
 
 (08-06) 18:19 PDT HAVANA, Cuba (AP) --
 
 Ibrahim Ferrer, a leading voice with the hugely popular Buena Vista Social Club of vintage Cuban performers, died Saturday, his representative in Cuba said. He was 78.
 
 The Montuno production company did not give a cause of death, but Ferrer's colleagues said he suffered from emphysema and was feeling ill earlier in the week.
 
 Known for his trademark cap and graying mustache, Ferrer was a wiry, animated figure who clearly enjoyed performing Cuba's traditional "son" music of the 1940s and 1950s for new generations of fans.
 
 Among a group of older Cuban performers recruited by U.S. musician Ry Cooder, Ferrer performed on the "Buena Vista Social Club album" that won a Grammy in 1999, and was among those appearing in the film of the same name.
 
 "I felt like he was my brother," said fellow Buena Vista performer, the guitarist Manuel Galban. "He was a great musician and a great companion."
 
 Also in 1999, Ferrer was featured in one of a string of albums that followed, "Buena Vista Social Club Presents Ibrahim Ferrer," and won a Latin Grammy for best new artist in 2000.
 
 Two other well-known members of the original Buena Vista group, singer Compay Segundo and pianist Ruben Gonzalez, died in 2003.
 
 Originally from Cuba's eastern city of Santiago, Ferrer was born on Feb. 20, 1927, during a dance at a social club after his mother unexpectedly went into labor.
 
 Ferrer was still a boy when he began singing professional with Santiago groups in 1941. By the late 1950s, he was a well-known singer performing regularly with the late, great bandleader Pacho Alonso.
 
 He also made guest appearances with other legendary names, including Benny More and Orquesta de Chepin.
 
 Alonso's group moved to Havana in 1959, and Ferrer came along, remaining with the group for more than two decades. By the early 1980s, Ferrer had left the musical scene, but came out of retirement to perform with the Buena Vista group.

SalParadise

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #125 on: August 07, 2005, 05:32:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by Random Citizen:
  Buena Vista Social Club Singer Ferrer Dies
 By ANITA SNOW, Associated Press Writer
 Saturday, August 6, 2005
 
 (08-06) 18:19 PDT HAVANA, Cuba (AP) --
 
 Ibrahim Ferrer, a leading voice with the hugely popular Buena Vista Social Club of vintage Cuban performers, died Saturday, his representative in Cuba said. He was 78.
 
 The Montuno production company did not give a cause of death, but Ferrer's colleagues said he suffered from emphysema and was feeling ill earlier in the week.
 
 Known for his trademark cap and graying mustache, Ferrer was a wiry, animated figure who clearly enjoyed performing Cuba's traditional "son" music of the 1940s and 1950s for new generations of fans.
 
 Among a group of older Cuban performers recruited by U.S. musician Ry Cooder, Ferrer performed on the "Buena Vista Social Club album" that won a Grammy in 1999, and was among those appearing in the film of the same name.
 
 "I felt like he was my brother," said fellow Buena Vista performer, the guitarist Manuel Galban. "He was a great musician and a great companion."
 
 Also in 1999, Ferrer was featured in one of a string of albums that followed, "Buena Vista Social Club Presents Ibrahim Ferrer," and won a Latin Grammy for best new artist in 2000.
 
 Two other well-known members of the original Buena Vista group, singer Compay Segundo and pianist Ruben Gonzalez, died in 2003.
 
 Originally from Cuba's eastern city of Santiago, Ferrer was born on Feb. 20, 1927, during a dance at a social club after his mother unexpectedly went into labor.
 
 Ferrer was still a boy when he began singing professional with Santiago groups in 1941. By the late 1950s, he was a well-known singer performing regularly with the late, great bandleader Pacho Alonso.
 
 He also made guest appearances with other legendary names, including Benny More and Orquesta de Chepin.
 
 Alonso's group moved to Havana in 1959, and Ferrer came along, remaining with the group for more than two decades. By the early 1980s, Ferrer had left the musical scene, but came out of retirement to perform with the Buena Vista group.
descanse en paz.

Jaguär

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #126 on: August 08, 2005, 12:36:00 am »
ABC News Anchor Peter Jennings Dies at 67
 
 By DAVID BAUDER, AP Television Writer
  35 minutes ago
 
 Peter Jennings, the suave, Canadian-born broadcaster who delivered the news to Americans each night in five separate decades, died Sunday. He was 67. Jennings, who announced in April that he had lung cancer, died at his New York home, ABC News President David Westin said late Sunday.
 
 "Peter has been our colleague, our friend, and our leader in so many ways. None of us will be the same without him," Westin said.
 
 With Tom Brokaw and Dan Rather, Jennings was part of a triumvirate that dominated network news for more than two decades, through the birth of cable news and the Internet. His smooth delivery and years of international reporting experience made Jennings particularly popular among urban dwellers.
 
 Jennings was the face of ABC News whenever a big story broke. He logged more than 60 hours on the air during the week of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, offering a soothing sense of continuity during a troubled time.
 
 "There are a lot of people who think our job is to reassure the public every night that their home, their community and their nation is safe," he told author Jeff Alan. "I don't subscribe to that at all. I subscribe to leaving people with essentially â?? sorry it's a cliche â?? a rough draft of history. Some days it's reassuring, some days it's absolutely destructive."
 
 Jennings' announcement four months ago that the longtime would begin treatment for lung cancer came as a shock.
 
 "I will continue to do the broadcast," he said, his voice husky, in a taped message that night. "On good days, my voice will not always be like this."
 
 But although Jennings occasionally came to the office between chemotherapy treatments, he never again appeared on the air.
 
 "He knew that it was an uphill struggle. But he faced it with realism, courage, and a firm hope that he would be one of the fortunate ones," Westin said. "In the end, he was not."
 
 Broadcasting was the family business for Jennings. His father, Charles Jennings, was the first person to anchor a nightly national news program in Canada and later became head of the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.'s news division. A picture of his father was displayed prominently in Jennings' office off ABC's newsroom.
 
 Charles Jennings' son had a Saturday morning radio show in Ottawa at age 9. Jennings never completed high school or college, and began his career as a news reporter at a radio station in Brockton, Ontario. He quickly earned an anchor job at Canadian Television.
 
 Sent south to cover the Democratic national convention in 1964, the handsome, dashing correspondent was noticed by ABC's news president. Jennings was offered a reporting job and left Canada for New York.
 
 As the third-place news network, ABC figured its only chance was to go after young viewers. Jennings was picked to anchor the evening news and debuted on Feb. 1, 1965. He was 26.
 
 "It was a little ridiculous when you think about it," Jennings told author Barbara Matusow. "A twenty-six-year-old trying to compete with Cronkite, Huntley and Brinkley. I was simply unqualified."
 
 Critics savaged him as a pretty face unfit for the promotion. Using the Canadian pronunciations for some words and once misidentifying the Marine Corps' anthem as "Anchors Aweigh" didn't help his reputation. The experiment ended three years later.
 
 He later described the humbling experience as an opportunity, "because I was obliged to figure out who I was and what I really wanted to be."
 
 Assigned as a foreign correspondent, Jennings thrived. He established an ABC News bureau in Beirut, and became an expert on the Middle East. He won a Peabody Award for a 1974 profile of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat.
 
 On the scene at the Munich Olympics in 1972, Jennings was perfectly placed to cover the hostage-taking of Israeli athletes by an Arab terrorist group. He and a crew hid in the athletes' quarters for a close-in view of the drama.
 
 Jennings returned to the evening news a decade after his unceremonious departure. In 1978, ABC renamed its broadcast "World News Tonight," and instituted a three-person anchor team: Frank Reynolds based in Washington, Max Robinson from Chicago and Jennings, by then ABC's chief foreign correspondent, from London.
 
 Following Reynolds' death from cancer, ABC abandoned the multi-anchor format and Jennings became sole anchor on Sept. 5, 1983.
 
 Starting in 1986, Jennings began a decade on top of the ratings. His international experience served him well explaining stories like the collapse of European communism, the first Gulf War and the terrorist bombing of an airplane over Lockerbie, Scotland. He took pride that "World News Tonight," as its name suggested, took a more worldly view than its rivals. Fans responded to his smart, controlled style.
 
 "When it's clearly an emotional experience for the audience, the anchor should not add his or her emotional layers," Jennings said in an interview with the Star Tribune in Minneapolis.
 
 Two-thirds of local broadcasters responding to a 1993 survey by Broadcasting & Cable magazine said Jennings was the best network news anchor. Washington Journalism Review named him anchor of the year three straight years.
 
 With Americans looking more inward in the mid to late-1990s, NBC's Tom Brokaw surpassed Jennings in the ratings. ABC was still a close No. 2, however. When Brokaw stepped down in November 2004, followed shortly by Rather, ABC began an advertising campaign stressing Jennings' experience â?? an ironic twist given how his ABC News career began.
 
 But ABC was never able to learn whether Jennings could take advantage of his role as an elder statesman; his cancer diagnosis came only a month after Rather left the anchor chair.
 
 Jennings was proud of his Canadian citizenship, although it was occasionally a sore point with some critics. When Jennings spoke at the dedication of a museum celebrating the U.S. Constitution in 2003, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia told him, "not bad for a Canadian."
 
 Jennings whispered back his secret: He had just passed a test earning him dual citizenship in the United States.
 
 "My decision to do this has nothing to do with politics," Jennings told The Associated Press at the time. "It has nothing to do with my profession. It has everything to do with my family."
 
 Restlessly curious, Jennings pushed ABC News to use the turn of the century for a massive historical study. He co-wrote a book, "The Century," with Todd Brewster and anchored a marathon 25-hour special ending Jan. 1, 2000. Jennings and Brewster also traveled the backroads to write "In Search of America."
 
 Jennings also led a documentary team at ABC News, which struck a chord in 2000 with the high-rated spiritual special "The Search for Jesus."
 
 "I have never spent a day in my adult life where I didn't learn something," Jennings told the Saturday Evening Post. "And if there is a born-again quality to me, that's it."
 
 Like Rather and Brokaw, Jennings wasn't entirely comfortable stuck to a studio. He traveled around the world to cover stories and, when he didn't journey to Asia to cover the aftermath of the tsunami less than four months before his cancer diagnosis, it was noticed.
 
 He is survived by his wife, Kayce Freed, and his two children, Elizabeth, 25, and Christopher, 23.

Venerable Bede

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #127 on: August 08, 2005, 10:34:00 am »
Former British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook; Quit Over Iraq War
 
 Associated Press
 Sunday, August 7, 2005; C10
 
 Former British foreign secretary Robin Cook, 59, who quit Prime Minister Tony Blair's cabinet in 2003 to protest the Iraq war, died Aug. 6 after collapsing on a Scottish mountain while walking with his wife.
 
 Scotland's Northern Constabulary said Mr. Cook collapsed on Ben Stack in the Scottish Highlands. He was taken by coast guard helicopter to a hospital in Inverness, where he was pronounced dead.
 
 Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott, filling in for a vacationing Blair, called Cook "the greatest parliamentarian of his generation."
 
 Mr. Cook served as foreign minister from 1997 until 2001, when he was demoted to leader of the House of Commons. His resignation speech, days before the Iraq war began in March 2003, received a rare standing ovation from lawmakers.
 
 "Why is it now so urgent that we should take military action to disarm a military capacity that has been there for 20 years, and which we helped to create?" he asked.
 
 Renowned as an intelligent lawmaker and skilled debater, Mr. Cook remained a high-profile figure despite his withdrawal from government, and he became an increasingly vocal opponent of Blair's policies.
 
 Some supporters believed that Mr. Cook should have been leader of the Labor Party. But Mr. Cook -- a short, bearded redhead -- declined to oppose Blair when he was elected Labor leader in 1994, declaring, "I am not good-looking enough."
 
 Instead, he accepted the post of foreign secretary after Blair's 1997 landslide election victory.
 
 But Mr. Cook's promise of an "ethical dimension" to British foreign policy often came back to haunt him, particularly after he sanctioned the sale of 16 Hawk jet fighters to Indonesia in 1999 despite the country's widely criticized human-rights record in East Timor.
 
 Another diplomatic miscalculation came during a trip to India and Pakistan, when he suggested that Britain could mediate any negotiations over the disputed territory of Kashmir. The remark irritated both countries.
 
 Mr. Cook was praised by many for his tough-minded handling of the 1999 Kosovo crisis, but that and other successes were partly overshadowed by the scandal of ending his 28-year marriage to his first wife, Margaret, at an airport as they were about to leave on vacation.
 
 Warned by Downing Street that a tabloid newspaper was about to disclose his longtime affair with his secretary Gaynor Regan, Mr. Cook immediately told his wife that he was leaving her. She wrote a book accusing her former husband of being depressed and a drunk, saying that his intelligence and ability were unmatched but that he had "absolutely no natural courtesy or sympathy."
 
 Mr. Cook later married Regan.
 
 Mr. Cook was educated at Edinburgh University, where he studied English literature and began a career in Labor politics. He was first elected to parliament in 1974.
 
 Survivors include his wife and two sons from his first marriage.
 
 Â© 2005 The Washington Post Company
OU812

Jaguär

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #128 on: August 14, 2005, 12:32:00 am »
Oscar-Winning Art Director Golitzen Dies
 
 Sat Aug 13, 3:09 PM ET
 
 Alexander Golitzen, an art director and production designer who shared Academy Awards for his work on 1943's "Phantom of the Opera," 1960's "Spartacus" and 1962's "To Kill a Mockingbird" during a career that spanned decades, has died. He was 97.
 
 Golitzen died July 26 of congestive heart failure at a health care center in San Diego, said his daughter, Cynthia Garn.
 
 Golitzen worked on more than 300 movies. He earned more than a dozen Oscar nominations for art direction, beginning with the 1940 Alfred Hitchcock movie "Foreign Correspondent" and ending with "Earthquake" in 1974.
 
 Others included 1961's "Flower Drum Song" and 1969's "Sweet Charity."
 
 The Moscow-born Golitzen and his family fled the Russian revolution and ended up in Seattle. Golitzen attended the University of Washington, where he earned an architecture degree, and moved to Los Angeles.
 
 In Los Angeles, he became an assistant to a fellow Russian, MGM art director Alexander Toluboff. He went on to work at United Artists and later was supervising art director at Universal, where he oversaw movies for three decades.
 
 He also designed the set for the Academy Awards show several times.
 
 Along with his daughter, Golitzen is survived by his wife, Frances; son, Peter; five grandchildren and a great-granddaughter.
 ___
 
 Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com

RonniStar

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #129 on: August 14, 2005, 11:46:00 pm »

beetsnotbeats

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #130 on: August 18, 2005, 11:56:00 pm »
Punk Promoter Esther Wong Dies at 88
 
 The Associated Press
 Wednesday, August 17, 2005; 6:01 PM
 
 LOS ANGELES -- Esther Wong, who booked a who's who of punk rock and new wave bands at her popular Madame Wong's clubs in the 1970s and '80s, has died. She was 88.
 
 She died Sunday at her Los Angeles home, her daughter, Melinda Braun, said Wednesday. She had suffered from emphysema and cancer.
 
   
 Wong, who earned the nickname the "godmother of punk," showcased such popular groups as the Police, X, the Go-Gos, Oingo Boingo, the Motels, the Knack, the Textones and Plane English early in their careers, giving many groups their first major break.
 
 The native of China originally booked Polynesian bands to play at her restaurant, but when hardly anyone showed up to hear them she decided to take a chance on rock acts. Almost overnight in 1978, hundreds of people began showing up at her Chinatown restaurant to hear the new sounds, and she opened a Madame Wong's West in Santa Monica that same year.
 
 "Before, I didn't think I'd ever like rock music," she told the Los Angeles Times in 1979. "Now I can turn it on, and it doesn't bother me."
 
 As her clubs flourished, Wong quickly became known as a no-nonsense proprietor. She once halted a performance by the Ramones until the band members left the stage and cleaned up the graffiti they had put on a bathroom wall. She rarely booked female singers, calling them "no good, always trouble," and she was known to go into the audience to try to sniff out marijuana smokers.
 
 "She would always take any problem or situation head-on, she was not afraid of anyone," her daughter told The Associated Press.
 
 Wong auditioned performers by listening to their tapes, often while driving in her car, until she said her habit of flinging bad music out the window nearly got her in trouble.
 
 "One day I almost hit the highway patrol car that was right next to me," she told the Times in 1980.
 
 Born and educated in Shanghai, Wong traveled the world as a child with her father, who was an importer.
 
 She moved to Los Angeles in 1949 when the Chinese government fell to the communists, working for two decades at a shipping company before opening her restaurant.
 
 She closed the original Madame Wong's in 1985 and Madame Wong's West in 1991.
 
 Wong is survived by her second husband, Harry Wong; a son, Frank Wong; her daughter, Braun; six grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

beetsnotbeats

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #131 on: August 22, 2005, 09:08:00 am »
Bob Moog
 
 ASHEVILLE, N.C. â?? August 21, 2005 â?? Bob died this afternoon at his home in Asheville, N.C. He was 71. Bob was diagnosed with brain cancer (glioblastoma multiforme or GBM) in late April 2005. He had received both radiation treatment and chemotherapy to help combat the disease. He is survived by his wife, Ileana, his five children, Laura Moog Lanier, Matthew Moog, Michelle Moog-Koussa, Renee Moog, and Miranda Richmond; and the mother of his children, Shirleigh Moog.
 
 Bob was warm and outgoing. He enjoyed meeting people from all over the world. He especially appreciated what Ileana referred to as "the magical connection" between music-makers and their instruments.
 
 No public memorial is planned. Fans and friends can direct their sympathies or remembrances to www.caringbridge.com/visit/bobmoog.
 
 Bob's family has established The Bob Moog Foundation dedicated to the Advancement of Electronic Music in his memory. Many of his longtime collaborators including musicians, engineers and educators have agreed to sit on its executive board including David Borden, Wendy Carlos, Joel Chadabpe, John Eaton, David Mash, and Rick Wakeman. For more information about the foundation, contact Matthew Moog at mattmoog@yahoo.com.
 
 We'll miss you Bob.

Jaguär

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #132 on: August 24, 2005, 02:19:00 am »
RIP, Dr. Moog.    :(  
 
 Coolest assembly that I ever attended was while I was in junior high school. The assembly was to see Robert Moog, himself, demonstrate and perform his invention, the Moog synthesizer. A very special day with a special man.

Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #133 on: August 24, 2005, 01:58:00 pm »
Had he even invented the darn thing at such an early date?   :(    
 
 Coolest assembly that I ever attended was while I was in junior high school. The assembly was to see Robert Moog, himself, demonstrate and perform his invention, the Moog synthesizer. A very special day with a special man. [/b][/quote]

sonickteam2

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Re: Dropping Like Flies
« Reply #134 on: August 24, 2005, 02:14:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by Jaguär:
  RIP, Dr. Moog.      :(    
 
 Coolest assembly that I ever attended was while I was in junior high school. The assembly was to see Robert Moog, himself, demonstrate and perform his invention, the Moog synthesizer. A very special day with a special man.
wow!!! very cool. didnt you also attend the assembly where Bell demonstrated his new invention, "the telephone"?