Moog Indigo is the ninth studio album by the French electronic music pioneer Jean-Jacques Perrey, released in 1970 on the Vanguard Records label.
[5][6][7] Perrey stated how he made this version to the Computer Music Journal magazine: For this composition, I took a Nagra tape recorder to an apiary in Switzerland to record the live sounds of bees buzzing about their hive.
We added an accompaniment to the melody, recreating the "Flight of the Bumblebee" played by living bees.
[8]"Gossipo Perpetuo" versioned Moto Perpetuo written by the Italian violinist and composer Niccolo Paganini[9] and also used "stuttering vocal samples" and "various Moog settings soaring up and down the scale while congas and shuffling drums hit a samba beat.
",[19] it was released as a single on 15 February, peaked at #79 in British charts[20] and also had a music video.
magazine declared that "there are countless creative opportunities to be found in this half-hour trip that have yet to be fully explored, and for the rest of us, it's an opportunity to experience a landmark album of electronic pop that stands the test of time.
"[1] Robert Ham of Paste magazine stated that "what keeps these records in circulation is the humor that artists like Perrey brought into the mix and how the sounds and spirit found within the grooves call to mind an era when the skies suddenly felt limitless.
[26] The website "Album of The Year" gave it an average score of 75 based on AllMusic and Exclaim!
[28] Notable examples include "Just To Get A Rep" by Gang Starr (1990),[29][30][31][32] "Lower da Boom" by Artifacts (1994),[33] "Gameplan" by Lord Finesse (1995),[34] "3000" by Dr.Octagon (1996),[35] "Same Ol'Thing" by A Tribe Called Quest (1997),[36] "Lunch Money" by Pusha T (2014),[37][38][39][40] and "Every Little Thing I Do" by Jamila Woods and Taylor Bennett (2017).