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Early electronic pop from France! Back in the early days of disco, anything with a strong beat could get club play. At the time, the burgeoning club scene became entranced with the steady 4/4 tribal beats of a variety of one hit wonders and The Peppers song "Pepper Box" is a perfect example. The Peppers were a French synth instrumental group composed of Keyboardist Mat Camison, Pierre Alain Dahan and Tonio Rubio. Experimenting with the then new Moog synthesizer sounds, they were able to create a bombastic style with a wailing synth line against a funky back beat that shook the dance floors of Europe in late 1973. The French have always been fans of electronic/syth based music hits like Donna Summer "I Feel Love", Hot Butter's "Popcorn", Space "Magic Fly", Jean Michel Jarre's "Oxygene" and Lilo's "Banana Split". Back in 1968, "Switched On Bach" using a Moog Synthesizer to play Bach's music was released by Walter Carlos. Since then Carlos has transitioned to Wendy. Back in my conservative Catholic teacher Sister Patricia taught music at my elementary school and she played this album for a classroom of eight year olds, and we liked it! She pointed out that the "new" sound was used to recreate classical instruments like the violin. Wendy helped to develop the synthesizer as we know it today and it was she who suggested that the Moog use a touch sensitive device for greater musical dynamics, in this case a keyboard. This was in 1964. Read more about Wendy Carlos here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wendy_C... I figured that with all the gooey sweetness of "Pepper Box" the info about the partial history of synth music would go down the right way. Happy Saturday!