Show And Tell #3
I did another show and tell session yesterday, I won't say with whom in case they don't want to publicly comment. But I though some folks might be interested in the setup in our music room:
That's Roger's white P3 on the left, the "Bollamin" kit in the center, a laptop to show the librarian and power the units, and my skanky lab unit on the right. For sound we were using the speakers I designed for our digital piano, seen between the P3 and the kit (sats on top, sub on the bottom).
Someone once said: "playing a rod is like like walking a tightrope, playing a plate is like walking on the sidewalk" and I have to agree. Maybe it's just years of playing plates, but with plates I don't have to pay very much attention to where my hands are horizontally. I'm not saying plates are for everyone, and rods certainly make a lot of sense on an analog Theremin for linearity reasons. And there is the historic expectation of the sight of rods on a Theremin, which I don't really know how to respond to. If history were somehow reversed, and digital Theremins came into existence before analog, this argument would go the other way and people would be hollering at the analog guys for using rods instead of plates. I'm not a big fan of legacy / backward compatibility / retro so I see these expectations as impediments to development and forward movement of the instrument, though I understand how one would like to accommodate someone's years of training on rods. For the rod crowd, I'd recommend they give plates a fair shot, and if they can't acclimate to them after a month or so, try narrow plates or larger diameter rods.
There was a lot of electrical interference yesterday, probably due to the AC unit running up in the attic directly above our heads. Of the three my lab unit was the most stable, which makes sense as plates give the best SNR. And believe me, you often need all the SNR you can get when measuring femto-Farads in real-time. I don't know how anyone has the stones to precision play any Theremin in a live setting for a large audience.
Anyway, if you're ever near Boonton, NJ and are interested in demoing the D-Lev, please contact me (email in my profile).