Wasnt sure which forum to post this, or even whether to post it at all.. Its another of these questions which I have often asked, got great feedback on, and done nothing with..
So please, understand that this is probably hypothetical and will probably come to nothing..
I have been playing with heterodyning mixers, pre-mixer wave-shaping, and formant "crafting" for a long while now, and have hit against something of a brick wall -
My problem is cost and complexity. I wanted to create an instrument where the player had control over the sound to a far greater level than on any present theremin.. In my head there's an instrument that can be adjusted to sound like a Claramin through to a MiniMoog..
The MiniMoog is the easy part ;-) I now believe that to replicate Lev's theremins, one cannot use subtractive synthesis - I was convinced that additive synthesis was the way forward - but my latest simulations convince me that the sound can only be achieved with a complex combination of the mixer waveform, formant filters, and seperate tone equalizers for each formant.
To do this in a user adjustable way one needs a massive control panel - for example:
6 waveform controls [waveform 1, Waveform 2, Morph, FM, Tilt 1, Tilt 2]
6 Formants each needing 4 controls (= 24 controls total) [Frq1,BW, Tilt,OP Lev]
And thats just for the formant section, doesnt take account of the other voicing stuff, tuning, preview etc.. Id be looking at about 50 potentiometers!
I have been looking at small finger-adjustable preset potentiometers (I used these on my H1's), they could be fitted under an accessible lid, so could be adjusted by the player - but they are not robust enough for frequent adjustment, and would be quite tightly packed together..
A few (perhaps 10) high quality potentiometers would be on the front panel, to allow some adjustment of the tone (and adjustment of tuning, preview, output etc) but the primary sound would be "programmed" by the controls under the lid.
If you had one great theremin voice (and im talking about one particular class of sound - the vocal type sounds from Lev's instruments - it would be a waste if you want the sound of modern theremins) you could program and forget, would the theremin appeal to you ? - Oh, this theremin will probably be about twice the price of an EW+ - or an add-on for the EW costing about the same price as an EW+ I would guess.. (would require a multi-pin socket on the back of the EW, small board in the EW, and an 'expander' box containing the voice circuitry)
I am hoping that a few (perhaps 2) controls on the front panel will give quite a lot of variation in the tonal qualities (probably more than the EW controls do) but the sound will primarily be determined by the settings of the formant resonators - and these are designed to provide two complete formants (as in, at least two formant filters) which morph into each other (one increasing in level as the other decreases) as the pitch changes - These formant filters are configured as independant individual formants, so can be arranged in any configuration - a 2 formant + 4 formant, a 3 + 3, or flipped as a 4 + 2 (the best results have been with 4 formants at the bass end and 2 at the treble)
I have been working on this with a view to incorporating it in my ribbon instrument - Its a lot easier with this because its 1.2m long and the front panel can accomodate more knobs - also, its modular, and its possible to have add-on units with different mixer and waveshaping stuff in these -
But I think (must emphasis that its only simulation) this scheme MIGHT produce results closer to the sound from Lev's theremins than anything available now.. It just feels that this stuff should be tried with a theremin first.
Oh - The above wont replicate a Mini-Moog as well ;-) .. I kind of got focussed on the Claramin.. Its easy enough to add a seperate "synth" voice later.. So this voice is focussed on adjustment of the waveform into the formant filters, and adjustment of the frequencies and levels from these filters, and adjustment of the levels from each filter as a function of the audio frequency from a seperate Ambler 'tilt' equalizer that follows each filter - then there are also some global filters and distorters to try to replicate the behaviour of tubes and transformers - all of which are adjustable.. But it doesnt do much else! ;-)
And like I say - its in my head and in my "virtual lab" but nowhere else - With my present situation the best realistic hope I have is of making one prototype, and publishing a video / sound and the design - but who knows...
I think I have a better chance of getting this "out" because im not thinking about production anymore - just plan to knock it together on breadboard without my usual agonising about every component.. If I did ever want to produce it I would probably need to do a major redesign..
Fred.