Moog's cleverness and skill at making imaginative instruments is unprecedented. And the E-1 guitar is no exception. Its ability to add or subtract vibrating energy from its strings in a variety of ways seems like it could potentially reinvent guitar playing.
But when the E-1 arrived in Wired's offices, our reaction was mixed. Like a blind date, you can usually tell in the first five seconds whether or not you and a new guitar are going to hit it off. And we got nothing but awkward chills from the E-1. There were uncomfortable pauses; we stumbled over each other's sentences and robotically checked the time every two minutes. No chemistry. But because infatuation had been building for so long, we persevered.

The sorcery of the E-1 (backed up by nine pending patents) is that it can magnetically vibrate or deaden the strings, all at once or selectively, as you play it. If you turn it on in the right setting, for example, all of the strings will just start vibrating without you touching them, giving off a beautiful, ghostly drone. The feeling of a guitar vibrating in your hand, as if by magic, made me laugh out loud.
The E-1 can also take energy away from the strings as you play them, to lend both a muted feel and sound. These are not effects built into the guitar: It's done by changing the way the strings themselves vibrate. Even if the E-1 is not plugged into an amp, you can hear and feel the vibrations and the muting acoustically.
When you do plug the guitar into an amp, you have two choices: Either go through the E-1's own foot pedal via a five-pin XLR cord that comes with the guitar (which gives you access to a few tasty filters and effects) or use the 1/4-inch output to go straight to your pedal chain or amp.
This is where the wonder starts to fade a bit. The level of the guitar signal going out of the Moog pedal is significantly quieter than bypassing it with a regular guitar cable. So the filters and modulations that the Moog pedal provides are rather weak. And since these effects are relative to the incoming signal, even cranking the amp didn't really improve them.





