I'm really excited to hear what you have to share with us, this is such an important recording and song.
@baddriddimworkshop
Күн бұрын
next time why not do tha bernie worrel part on flashlights, that's a nice one...
@BlazinRiver1
Күн бұрын
This is way cool. Here I am 66 years old and I never knew how this instrument actually works. Been playing rock since 1971 and I learned something new.
@axs203
Күн бұрын
It's amazing how simple the bassline is at the start. It shows you with bass less is more. That moog sounds so funky and rubbery!
@mathumphreys
Күн бұрын
Poor Anthony is still coming to terms with no Mini Moog on the album.😅
@ricbm
Күн бұрын
Haven't watched the video yet. Two days ago I got curious about what a Clavinet was. That led me to watch how the Superstition intro was made and how difficult it ts to recreate. It's like a personalized algorithm for me 😂
@eugeneport1748
2 күн бұрын
Tonto!
@carlosmodegahan4455
Күн бұрын
I would like to see you review and jam on the Moog Muse and hear your thoughts on it!!!
@kaitlyn__L
Күн бұрын
The 921B _does_ have sine waves! Some joker dunning-kruger'd me the other day claiming absolutely no early East-coast synths bothered with sine waves. I knew he was wrong but, jeez, he said it with such conviction it's been bugging me all along.
@Lost68er_SYNTH_PUNK
Күн бұрын
I heard this song as a child, and I found it, well, not particularly interesting (I think I was 6 years old). Then I heard it sometime in the 80s, when I was already making music myself - and I totally freaked out! The thing has a groove that gets more and more awesome when the horns come in at the back, just great! I only realized then that it was a Stevie Wonder song that I (born in '68) had heard in the 80s with "I just called o say I love you" and thought it was a "cuddly singer". And then I learned that he had experimented with synthesizers very early on. A really interesting guy....
@DohcHama
Күн бұрын
Awesome tutorial - very clear logical explanations Sensei Marinelli
@cubalibre023ify
Күн бұрын
I think my Moog grandmother will come close soundwise, same DNA 😁
@BullyMaguire4ever
Күн бұрын
I was lucky enough to meet Malcolm Cecil a few years back. Such a cool and gracious sonic wizard he was.
@maxdiamond55
Күн бұрын
Thanks Anthony, another great one. may push the button on a german copy until my finances allow a moog original.
@tommayo3212
Күн бұрын
diabolical genius!! I will be playing this song all week...
@billwolfer4020
Күн бұрын
BTW, when Stevie plays synth bass, he uses two hands: the left mostly lays on the tonic note, and the right adds the embellishments. It makes all the difference, especially if you try to play Boogie On Reggae Woman. Kind of hard to explain, but just seeing him do it was a revelation. Greetings from Laos!
@anthonymarinellimusic
Күн бұрын
Great insight!
@ChuckWasHere
Күн бұрын
PLEASE do a breakdown of Stevie's synth bass part in Ordinary Pain at 2:40. It's the single funkiest bassline every composed.
@cyberoptic5757
Күн бұрын
Thank you, very much. ADSR, I understood. Now PTDV is making some sense
@javiercojoba
Күн бұрын
Easier on the Mini (and my Subsequent 37) without (figuring out) any patch cables! 👍
@billwolfer4020
Күн бұрын
The thing about Superstition that I find remarkable is that Stevie started the track with just drums, and NO click track. He had the whole song in his head, and played all the fills, everything while imagining what he was gonna lay on top of it. I can’t imagine doing that-he IS a Wonder!
@Jay.Ramone
Күн бұрын
This is great. Loving the insight. Thanks :) "I made a conscious decision, because of Stevie Wonder, to not be superstitious." - Matt Goss
@ewwitsantonio
Күн бұрын
Truly one of my favorite songs, bass lines, and bass patches out there. Such a joy to see this video!!! Thank you again for the wonderful work on these videos!! Is the Driver hooked up to the Osc modules in the back? I was surprised to not see a patch cable for the pulse width
@MERLIMARTISTICPRODUTIONS
Күн бұрын
tony, always a great synth post mr synth
@shable1436
Күн бұрын
Anthony I grew up playing an old upright in my youth, and some basic keyboards, never went to the serious path of synths, however I did play guitar professionally, and toured with some well known acts, and legends, I just wanted to bring up the old saying it's not always in the tones but the hands, the fingerings, and touch. It's good to strip down everything sometimes to get back the raw, only reason I mention this is because of the surprise you had of the lack of the minimoog, and I figured if anyone can understand what i mean it's you
@christoroppolo8742
Күн бұрын
It’s in such excellent condition for a big giant Moog mongo like!👍👽✌️
@chazinko
Күн бұрын
Anthony, this was incredible. Thank you!
@tp63us
Күн бұрын
Thanks so much. I understood what is happening from how you said and showed it. This is great info for making sounds in any synth.
@delscoville
Күн бұрын
Following this I was able to get quite close with my Pro 3 SE.
@fewunderstandthis7355
Күн бұрын
Love this. It would be great to have a follow up to show how you replicate these sounds on one or more modern synths
@morph-the-cat
Күн бұрын
Remember to subscribe, people! I watched Anthony's videos for weeks before realising I wasn't subbed....
@anthonymarinellimusic
19 сағат бұрын
Thank you, thank you for spreading the word!
@42BassMaster42
Күн бұрын
What a cool human. I love this channel.
@joelfriedman8622
Күн бұрын
Yes! More Stevie patches! His sounds were the biggest influence on my synth playing by far.
@anthonymarinellimusic
Күн бұрын
We can emulate it, but Stevie created it! So magically…
@citrusblast4372
Күн бұрын
Do your videos ever get DMCA’d/copyright striked?
@anthonymarinellimusic
Күн бұрын
Just De Monitized 🙃
@bmuhamad
Күн бұрын
I have always loved the Moog sound. From Bernie Worrell to Sun Ra, & Dick Hyman.....Thanks.
@danielberiain5580
21 сағат бұрын
Menudo descubrimiento. Claro, así que da esa sensación de que "hay más de lo que parece"...
@murat_buyuk
18 сағат бұрын
I will take my time until I have to dough for the Maxi Moog 😅 Thanks for the instructions. Very well expressed for newbies in modular synth users. Maybe you should add a text box for the key tracking, since it seems to be attenuVERTING, not just attenuating. When you went fully CCW the high notes were muffled and the low notes still had the envelope going.
@Meteotrance
12 сағат бұрын
I Always thinking he was using an ARP 2600 for that or maybe an ARP Odyssea for that bassline, there where some glide flavours unique to those ARP analog synth but both are very similar in fact i play hardware version and software from Moog and ARP wich are very similar in term of waveform when you compare side by side from soft replica to hardware it's very close but the difference is very subtle ther hardware one can be out of tune more quickly and don't have the stability of the soft replica, but that's more than OK. To mee the analog are much warmer and juicer but the virtual replica are super accurate now.
@ipezmusic
Күн бұрын
Mini... No. LOL
@PatternRecognitionMusic
Күн бұрын
When the Behringer modules were announced a few years back, I was pretty geeked to see it, having gotten hooked on Klaus Schulze & Pete Namlook's Dark Side Of The Moog series. I don't have physical space even for a scaled down Moog modular right now, but how cool is it that something like this is attainable for the average Joe these days? Of course, as you point out, the synthesis principles apply across the board and there are always solid takeaways from your videos regardless of what gear we're running at home. As always, thanks for that, Anthony! I'd love to see more of those iconic Moog sounds broken down, maybe some Keith Emerson stuff, or the aforementioned Klaus Schulze.
@KyuminShimMusic
Күн бұрын
This is awesome. Thanks Anthony. KZitem is worth it because creators like you! Enjoy watching everything you put. Hope to watch and listen more 😊
@wirenoises
Күн бұрын
Another great video and lesson. Built out a reasonable approximation using the Mark Barton Voltage Modular VM900 modules. I've had them for a while and this inspired me to start working with them. Appreciate the Mini Moog walk-through, too. Thanks!
@thirstyCactus
Күн бұрын
@11:57 Fascinating! This must have leaked to Korg somehow; all of their synths had that same control layout with the RC flight joystick, from '80 - '89.
@MichaelScottGordon
Күн бұрын
Anthony & The Crew! Another wonderful demonstration. I knew nothing about synths until I started watching your channel. I still didn't know much but I know i love, love, love watching how the sounds are created and I'm falling in love with synthesizers. Thanks again for sharing your wealth of knowledge. I continue to be blown away by every video.
@Pepijn_a.k.a._Akikaze
17 сағат бұрын
Videos like this are treasures. I still find it amazing how expressive an early Moog bass can be, given the few amount of controls. Maybe the Moog Matriarch and Muse can approximate the modular Moog's saturation better, but I guess the differences are subtle.
@moogfooger
Күн бұрын
You have finally utilized the IIIC, What a wonderul machine. Thanks so much for the breakdown Cheers
@PetrFink
Күн бұрын
I like the ModelD bass a lot more ;))) But anyway, fantastic video!! Thx for that!
@brickupdate
Күн бұрын
Subscribed. Amazing videos. Thank you.
@oldnikix
Күн бұрын
fantastico✨
@mikebozik
Күн бұрын
I've always had a general knowledge of how these synths worked, but never took the deep dive. Thank you so much for going into more detail about moving the signal through the chain. It is logical, but there is a lot of internal routing you have to keep in the front of your head. It gives me a whole new appreciation for guys like you and Steve Porcaro etc. It definitely takes a different type of brain. I can't even imagine how you OG's got going programming this stuff, deciphering manuals and endless hours of experimenting. Mind-blowing! 😊
@stevepeterson5943
Күн бұрын
(drummer here) I jammed with some real hip cats (decades ago), out of my league, but they got me there, and we played together lots. We did "Whats Goin On" Marvin Gaye, and on break the keyboard player stops me in the bathroom, says, "youre doing great. When we do that tune again play this on the drums" , and he hums out the beat. Its the same beat as the Superstition intro, great groove thanks Terry! : )
@hellorambo
Күн бұрын
Anthony, this channel is an absolute boon to music history brother. Keep up the great work. P.S. Break out that oB-X and play some Rush!
@billwolfer4020
Күн бұрын
Nicely done, Anthony! I especially liked your explanation of the signal path at the end. The beauty of subtractive synthesis is that once you learn those basics, you can get around on practically any synth. I first learned it from the excellent owners manual that came with my Minimoog that I bought in 1972.
@shagtracks
Күн бұрын
This was awesome!! Thank you to you and crew for all these amazing vids!!🙌🏼🎶✨
@MrTravisAl
Күн бұрын
I love what you do!!! Subscribed and bell on for notification of all upload varieties! ..It’s odd that I didn’t have subscription active yet because I share your videos all the time. I’m glad you said the reminder. ☺️🤟. I’m forwarding this to my cousin for him to subscribe as well.
@stolatbao
Күн бұрын
Thank you, really amazing to watch these sounds being made, not as complicated as you would think but completely right. Bassist gone rogue, toying with adding another synth to the collection, might even sell a Bass.
@silver7211
Күн бұрын
Can u try recreate kraftwerk robots on it? By using seq with is modulating pitch and filter? Love this unit so much ❤
@SamLibman
Күн бұрын
This is one of my favorite videos you’ve ever done. I love seeing you interact with this beautiful beast of a synthesizer, and I love the way you teach. Can’t wait for what else you do with that Moog! Peace.
@jamarwashington6419
Күн бұрын
You have to be "very superstitious" to even invest in that synth just to make the Superstition bass sound. "Very superstitioooous....patches on the waaaaaall!" 🎶
@3vrgalois
23 сағат бұрын
6:24 "More boom on the bottom." That should have been the video title. Jokes aside, another great video. Very instructive.
@RJasonKlein
Күн бұрын
I love this channel and the incredible insight you provide. Thank you!
@MacLuz
13 сағат бұрын
How Anthony loves the waveforms and explains it in every detail! In his videos he speaks directly to me.
@aseomg
Күн бұрын
The big Moog sounds like a bass guitar, the mini sounds like a synth. Cool breakdown of the sound.
@Anders01
19 сағат бұрын
Nice sound! I hadn't even heard of Moog IIIc, only of Moog 55.
@marskristin
Күн бұрын
Loved this breakdown of an absolutely *iconic* bass!
@tomtebby7408
Күн бұрын
Fab as always. So cool you recreated the bass sound on the Mini. Look forward to more videos.
@wickedcurve1975
Күн бұрын
Incredible. Thank you! 🐶💓🐶🙌🙌
@jonyjoe8464
Күн бұрын
nusical geniuses who can get those complex sounds from such complicated machines.
@Benutzer101
23 сағат бұрын
Ehrlich. Ihren Kanal jetzt auf KZitem erleben zu können ist ein großes Geschenk. Dankeschön!
@MikkelGrumBovin
21 сағат бұрын
Too cool for Highschool,-😘 I learn from the best - i learn from you!
@wkelly-hn4kb
Күн бұрын
Sings the lead to living in the city while you tweak that bass. Superstitious was the first thing I ever bought as a pre teen.
@schoovaertssimon7904
Күн бұрын
like this comment if you don't own a Model 10
@anthonysaunders9786
19 сағат бұрын
Amazing work as always! Thank you.
@devamota6031
Күн бұрын
Thats cool but it doesnt top Stevies "So what the fuss" bass ;)
@alejoromero
Күн бұрын
I always thought it was played by an electric bass.
@EricAndre615
17 сағат бұрын
I love synthesizers. They're just the best.
@ScottieBarnett
Күн бұрын
MAY THA FUNK BE WITH U!
@anthonymarinellimusic
Күн бұрын
And with YOU
@levelletate4551
Күн бұрын
Your content is Awesome, thanks 🙏🏿
@ap7498
Күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing and teaching!
@davidlincolnbrooks
Күн бұрын
I never knew the bass part mirrored that trumpet riff!
@Auldhelm
Күн бұрын
If Dr. Who had a synth in the Tardis - this is what it would look like
@GiorgioBertuccelli
Күн бұрын
LOVE.the bass sound that got me in to music..
@LuigiVincenti
Күн бұрын
Great video, as usual❤. I wanted to ask you a question (also addressed to those who are reading the comments): is it possible to create a kick followed by a roaring bass (in my head all this is obtained with just one key - I don't know if you know what I mean), simulating the movement that water makes when you throw a stone, maybe on the ARP 2600? I know it's a strange question, but it's been in my head for a while and I've tried in every way known to me, without success.
@anthonymarinellimusic
Күн бұрын
Stanford CCRMA has a lab with a speaker array that can simulate the sound of reflections in water. That’s the best way I’ve seen it done.
@jamesmorss9940
Күн бұрын
pure gold, such a diamond!
@djloopbeatzz
Күн бұрын
More History lessons from the legends
@ctlfishdangerzone7633
Күн бұрын
The video cut to the knob twist is so ace!!!!❤
@hdsubstance1
Күн бұрын
Great one! Will try on my system 55
@michaelnieves6632
Күн бұрын
❤️Anthony Marinelli
@ueleBassPlayer
19 сағат бұрын
that timbre... legendary
@colinrussell2017
Күн бұрын
Never seen so much Moog in one shot before!
@sergioboccia6020
Күн бұрын
Thanks a lot. Thanks so much.
@jeffwoeber9590
Күн бұрын
Love these, Keep 'em coming :)
@jaycareaga9929
Күн бұрын
There is a real bass in there played by Nate Watts.
@keiththomas111
Күн бұрын
Stevie protect that man at all cost 🎤🎧🎹💪
@Bikki-oz3en
Күн бұрын
Another great post full of amazing selfless content. I do not own a Mini moog ... but as a bassist, hope to do so in the future. Thanks again Anthony for this share. I hope that life is as abundantly generous to you as you are with us. #allthingsmoog #anthonymarinellimusic
@anthonymarinellimusic
Күн бұрын
Thank you for your kindness!
@mcgyrus
Күн бұрын
Woooo!
@Clupea101
Күн бұрын
Great stuff, as always
@UBERKalti
Күн бұрын
"JAM"arinelli ❤
@jeffryb
Күн бұрын
very, very, nice
@unclemick-synths
Күн бұрын
I love these how-to videos 👍
@davidsharp3110
Күн бұрын
Sweet! I hope you do a video on all the modules of the MaxiMoog. Thanks
@anthonymarinellimusic
Күн бұрын
Keep an eye out for videos coming next week! I think you’ll like what coming
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