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Thread: Doug McKechnie - Moog pioneer

  1. #1
    Member Zeuhlmate's Avatar
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    Doug McKechnie - Moog pioneer





    https://www.facebook.com/groups/4470...=recently_seen

    Doug McKechnie (born 1941) is an American musician, known for his work with the Moog synthesizer. McKechnie was highly active in the San Francisco music scene from 1968 to 1972, when he was forced to stop playing his synthesizer after it was sold. McKechnie was a contemporary of Wendy Carlos and has been labelled a pioneer of early electronic music, although his work remained underground until the 2020s. His sequencer-based style of music influenced future performers, including Tangerine Dream to whom his Moog was sold.
    McKechnie began using the Moog modular Series III in 1968 and was one of the first musicians to use the instrument. He received access to the instrument through Bruce Hatch, who ended up working with McKechnie at the San Francisco Radical Laboratories at 759 Harrison Street, San Francisco. The synthesizer McKechnie played on was one of the first produced and had a serial number of 004.
    With the synthesizer, McKechnie appeared on "What's Become of the Baby", on Grateful Dead's Aoxomoxoa (1969). He also performed live shows with the band in 1969. Due to his connection with the band, McKechnie was a performer at the 1969 Altamont Free Concert.On his set, he played a single oscillator sweep, from 55–20,000 Hz. He was unplugged by Owsley Stanley before he finished the set. Also in 1969, McKechnie used the Moog synthesizer for a performance of Terry Riley's In C at the San Francisco Opera House.Other performances included playing for the opening of Frank Oppenheimer's Exploratorium;the multimedia attraction Robin (1972), produced by Alotavus Productions and screened at the Family Dog concert hall; and the first ever concert at the Berkeley Art Museum.
    McKechnie and Hatch also used the synthesizer as a teaching aid in colleges and universities around the San Francisco Bay Area. Four years after starting playing the synthesizer, McKechnie was forced to stop playing it after Hatch sold it to Tangerine Dream in 1972.
    In 1975, McKechnie founded the San Francisco Synthesizer Ensemble with Paul de Benedictis, John Lewis and Jim Purcell. The group became known in 2012 when they used the Golden Gate Bridge as an instrument for their song, A Day in the Life of the Golden Gate Bridge. McKechnie and other members of the group used sounds sampled from striking the bridge's suspension cables with mallets to create the song.
    In around 1980, McKechnie and Paul de Benedictis formed a group called New Logic. The duo released an album on cassette, Inside Your Head(1984), under the moniker; it features musical collaborations and solo work between de Benedictis and McKechnie recorded during the early 1980s.
    McKechnie is noted for his sequencer-based approach to synthesis, sometimes fueled by psychoactive drugs like LSD and nitrous oxide. His Moog synthesizer contained two step-sequencers, nine oscillators, and both a ribbon controller and a 60-key keyboard. The synthesizer's size led Hatch and McKechnie to nickname the instrument the "Big Moog".
    McKechnie used the sequencers on the synthesizer to drive his performances. This pattern based style predated the Berlin school of synthesis, promoted by artists like Tangerine Dream. McKechnie recorded all his tracks live, with no overdubbing or editing.
    McKechnie has been called a pioneer of synthesizers. His work has been compared to that of Wendy Carlos, who was a contemporary of McKechnie's. Unlike Carlos and other early users of the Moog synthesizer, McKechnie was unique in his use of the instrument while touring. Although he was famous in the electronic music scene of San Francisco, his work remained underground until the early 2020s, when two records of his recordings were produced by VG+ Records. His work influenced other artists and groups, including Tangerine Dream. His relative obscurity led Klemen Breznikar of It's Psychedelic Baby! Magazine to call McKechnie a "critical missing link" in electronic music history.

  2. #2
    I heard of him when someone posted tapes of the Altamont festival to YouTube including his set. It must have set a fitting dystopian tone for that day.


  3. #3
    Member Mr.Krautman's Avatar
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    I consider myself as a true E.M/synths freak and over the past 45 years have accumulated almost anything I could find about this genre.
    Of course I'm also highly interested by E.M pioneers but must confess I've NEVER heard (or read) about this guy (so far). Of course the fact he hasn't released any records during his "active" career limited to the S.F area doesn't really help. VERY obscure (much more than R.Scott, Beaver, Krause, P.Bley et al)
    The YT snippet sounds very promising and now I need to locate the VG CD's, which looks like another challenge...
    Thank you for your very informative post.
    Last edited by Mr.Krautman; 08-20-2024 at 08:21 PM.

  4. #4
    Jazzbo manqué Mister Triscuits's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr.Krautman View Post
    now I need to locate the VG CD's, which looks like another challenge...
    Easy peasy.
    https://dougmckechnie.bandcamp.com/a...o-moog-1968-72

    I have the vinyl myself.
    Hurtleturtled Out of Heaven - an electronic music composition, on CD and vinyl
    https://michaelpdawson.bandcamp.com
    http://www.waysidemusic.com/Music-Pr...MCD-spc-7.aspx

  5. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by Mister Triscuits View Post
    Easy peasy.
    https://dougmckechnie.bandcamp.com/a...o-moog-1968-72

    I have the vinyl myself.
    Oddly enough one of the producers listed on the Bandcamp site is PJ Dorsey. He releases cool electronic music under the artist name Tarotplane.

  6. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by smcfee View Post
    Oddly enough one of the producers listed on the Bandcamp site is PJ Dorsey. He releases cool electronic music under the artist name Tarotplane.
    I have a few Tarotplane albums actually!!

    I remember when the McKechnie first came up on Bandcamp, and while I enjoyed the listen, I found it mainly interesting as a historical reference point but was unlikely to revisit it regularly. Obviously YMMV!
    If you're actually reading this then chances are you already have my last album but if NOT and you're curious:
    https://battema.bandcamp.com/

    Also, Ephemeral Sun: it's a thing and we like making things that might be your thing: https://ephemeralsun.bandcamp.com

  7. #7
    Member clivey's Avatar
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    Thanks for that link. I really enjoy this kinda vibe. In fact I am on a short commute listening now.

  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by battema View Post
    I have a few Tarotplane albums actually!!
    Excellent... obscure electronic music appreciators unite!

  9. #9
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    Thanks for sharing! I went an bought the CD off of bandcamp. :-)

  10. #10
    Very cool. Thanks for sharing this.

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