Strange Sounds
In 1966 a new age in music was quietly ushered in when Robert Moog sold the first production models of his Moog synthesizer. At the same time, on the cusp of this new era in electronic music, two American rock bands were taking a more primitive, home

The electronic two-piece Silver Apples took their name from a line in the WB Yeats poem, Song Of Wandering Aengus. Coincidentally, an experimental classical electronic album called Silver Apples Of The Moon (1967), by Morton Subotnick, also took the same Yeats line for its title. The two are not related. Simeon Coxe, the leader of the Silver Apples, explains: "I had no background in ‘serious’ electronic music. I was strictly a rock-and-roller who happened to have a friend who had an oscillator that he played along with classical music for fun. One day, when he wasn’t looking, I started jamming along with a Stones record and was hooked."
This feature first appeared in Music Tech Magazine issue 37
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