[i]"Just one such theremin at first, covering the most commonly used range of pitches in classical playing (mezzo-soprano?) and a timbre to suit.
And then a double bass (?) model with the same field characteristics (for player mobility between models) and a timbre to suit the different range and to differentiate it from the other model - and with RF frequencies that do not interfere - for duets.
And so on." - Gordon C [/i]
[b]*[/b]
Gordon - Are you suggesting having a range of Theremins covering different pitches and with different range/tonal charactaristics, or are you suggesting a Theremin which can be upgraded / changed to suit different requirements?
I am working to have a single Theremin which covers the vast majority (if not all) of possible requirements.. and an now looking at a lower cost version with switchable register and 5 octave coverage.
Would people Really want say 3 Theremins to cover 3 register ranges? Say the price of each was 'x' and the price of a Theremin which covered every requirement was 2x, and the 2x version actually was the equivalent of 5 'x' priced Theremins... ok, at the beginning they may be happy to only need to pay 'x'.. but I dont think their happyness would last long - as soon as they played a Tvox, or were unable to play a piece because they needed an extra octave up or down... I would be most Peed off if my Moog Prodigy was limited to the 3 octaves its keyboard covered, and I was not able to drive it via MIDI->CV from my 8 octave master keyboard..
I also wonder about the validity of the idea that limited range (say 3.5 octaves) and increased spacing between musical intervals, will actually assist beginners..
ok, my expierience is extremely limited, but I actually find it a LOT easier to play if the spacing between intervals is quite small.. I have quite a large hand and longer than average fingers, and on the Tvox I was able to span nearly 2 octaves just by moving my hand / fingers, and not moving my arm / elbow at all.. I found this comfortable and reasonably easy, certainly easy compared to the E-Pro, where I could only just-about get one octave without having to move my arm.. I never managed to work out what I could span on the standard - I seemed to need to move my arm for everything.
On my prototype, I am finding it far easier to play if the CV is cranked quite high - say 8 octaves in 1 metre, than if the CV is attenuated so I only get 4 octaves in a metre.. It is early days, and the playing conditions are far from ideal on the prototype (scope leads tend to get in the way and sometimes influence the response, LOL!) but so far I am inclined to think that too large a note spacing makes playing harder.