RS Theremin wrote:
TM Sample 3 I think it might sound OK. LOL
I do not recommend the TM to anyone that does not have full control and technical understanding of their theremin.
Christopher, there is a lot of distortion on the sample above and there is also a "ghost" tone shadowing the notes as you play. It moves with the theremin so I suspect it is coming from the instrument itself and not from any of your peripherals.
I have always thought that the "magic" of the theremin comes from the fact that it sounds so human. People who attended Leon Theremin's original demonstrations back in the 1920's and 30's, never having heard an electronic musical sound before, often remarked that they thought they were hearing the "voices" of angels or the "singing" of disembodied spirits.
The most sought-after sound for theremins seems to be what has come to be called the "singing lady". This particular timbre, if your theremin is capable of generating it at all, only works when you are playing within the range of a soprano or mezzo soprano. The instrument loses its "humanity" if you go too high (squeaky) or too low (buzzy)
ENTER: The Talking Machine
The theremin can now fearlessly play in the range of the tenor and baritone and retain its uncanny human timbre. There is only one preset on the TM where this will work but it can be very effective - with certain limitations.
There is tremendous power in the sound of a great tenor or baritone singer. I have stood next to a couple of the greatest classical singers of the 20th century when they have been singing full voice and the sheer volume of the sound they can produce is astonishing. Their voices, when they are singing fortissimo on their high notes, can easily ride, unamplified, over the top of a full symphony orchestra.
Here is where the TM breaks down. If you are playing your theremin through the TM using the open "AH" sound, and if your instrument is properly adjusted, you can get a surprisingly human sound from the lower and mid tenor/baritone registers but as you go higher and approach C5 (or tenor "high C" = one octave above Middle C) you do not get the power of Pavarotti. Instead, you slide into a tenor "falsetto" or alto sound. There is nothing wrong with that, but the timbre lacks the impact of a full-voice, dramatic tenor high 'C'. Instead, it's a loud mid-range soprano.
This makes the TM "AH" sound more appropriate for the gentler art song/lieder repertoire, rather than grand arias like "Vesti la giubba" from PAGLIACCI. In the lingo of singers, the TM as it goes higher in the tenor/baritone range, automatically leaves the "chest tone" and goes into the "head tone".
I'm not sure how much interest or importance any of this has for the good people in this forum but here is an example of what I mean. This is the aria CELESTE AIDA from Verdi's opera "Aida" played on the Julius Goldberg RCA using the Talking Machine on the open "AH" with the settings I described in a previous post.
Verdi's music calls out for tension in the high notes but the TM/RCA although it can give us volume, cannot give us that triumphant, over-the-top, WOW! that great tenors can achieve. The theremin floats effortlessly into its high notes, whereas the human must work for both power and control, all of which translates into INTENSITY.
http://www.peterpringle.com/music/aida.mp3