Moog One
 A
synth like the Moog One is 
unlikely to be anybody’s 
first: it’s large, heavy and 
expensive. I came to it not 
long after its release but already had 
a fairly extensive collection of 
instruments from ’80s classics like 
the Juno to modern synths from 
Korg, Arturia and Sequential, 
alongside over 1,000hp of Eurorack. 
While I have always managed to find 
uses for my other gear, the Moog One 
has become the go-to instrument for 
an ever increasing number of uses. 
That might be in part due to the 
presence of it in my studio, where it 
definitely dominates but mostly 
because I have come to rely on the 
versatility and simple playability. It 
has become the core of my musical 
and sound design work and has 
helped me shape effects for film and 
game projects; it’s also become the 
focus of a whole album.
Initial concerns about pitch drift, 
especially in the low end, never 
turned out to be too much of a 
problem for me. Keeping it in a 
studio with a stable temperature and 
humidity helped there, but Moog 
updated the firmware, which solved 
remaining issues. Since updating the 
firmware it has remained rock solid.
So, what do I love about it? Firstly 
it’s just so easy to navigate. The big 
screen and controls make it a doddle 
to work with. Saving sounds, 
sequences and effects is so simple 
and fast that a session can be 
productive but repeatable, something 
I value highly. But really it’s the 
sound design workflow that sells it for 
me. Being able to easily assign 
modulation sources and destinations, 
without having to dig into menus is a 
real boon, with excellent visual 
feedback and being able to dig 
deeper opens limitless possibilities, 
but does so only when you need 
them, staying out of the way when 
you don’t, meaning the whole 
instrument is clear and simple.
One is not unamused
Then there’s the sound. I’d put this 
second after the interface purely 
because if the workflow wasn’t good I 
would soon tire of it, no matter how 
good it sounded. Or I’d end up using 
presets (I’m looking at you DX7). 
Luckily the Moog One sounds superb. 
Moog One From £5,775
Rob Redman waxes lyrical about his love affair 
with the Moog One – but is it a keeper? 
CONTACT WHO: Moog Music WEB: moogmusic.com KEY FEATURES 8 or 16 analogue voices, Ladder and state variable filters, 4 LFOs, 3 
envelope generators, Pitch and mod wheels plus XY pad and aftertouch, Extensive mod matrix, Eventide effects, Sequencer and arpeggiator
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