"In 10 years time I truly believe there will be no one that can tell the difference as long as the musician using the samples really knows what they are doing. Theremin included (assuming anyone wants to create a professional theremin sample library). " - Rich
I agree that the vast majority of people will be fooled, even (particularly?) on theremin samples as most have not listened to much theremin - In fact, I would say that the vast majority couldn't tell the difference between a skillfully played portamentoed keyboard and a theremin.
BUT -
For those who know and play the theremin, I think they will be able to identify sample produced works.
First though, I think I need to define what what I talking about, because there is grounds for confusion and I think I may have tripped into this a bit..
As I see it, sampling could be placed into two 'groups' - Mostly, it is used to allow instruments to be played on different interfaces, primarily a keyboard or DAW.. With such interfaces the sample can "embody" all sorts of "subtleties" such as vibrato and amplitude modulations etc.
As an instrument designer I have been thinking mainly in terms of another use - this being the use of sampled sounds is some form of wave-table configuration, to be controlled by a digital version of the original instrument.. And here I have realized that one cannot capture the theremins 'magic' or 'authentic sound' in samples and put them under the (new) players control - for the simple reason that the essence of this magic is in the real-time control the original player 'embedded' into the sound.
Imagine one had a purely electronic violin which accurately relayed pitch and vibrato and bowing and all other performance related data to a wave-table engine, the only usable samples would be those devoid of vibrato or other other performance related functions.. As soon as one used a sample containing 'embedded' vibrato or amplitude modulations, the controlling violin would become unplayable.
The same is true for a theremin.
However - Play a violin sample set on a keyboard, and if you know what you are doing you can make music which will convince most that you have a violinist in there! - This is because (IMO) you are, in fact, replaying the skill and musicality embedded by the performer who created the sample.
With the violin, there are many great violinists - obtaining a large set of good quality "composite" samples with "music in their soul" is possible, and the "correct" samples to suite the music can probably be found.. But imagine that there had only been 10 "worthy" violinists, and that all violin samples had to be extracted from past performances from these 10 - I think people would identify the samples as "the same sample as x used on their performance of y"
We could load up raw waveforms from classic instruments, and accept that these will only sound 'magic' if played well and the qualities are embedded by the player - but I am now inclined to think its a lot easier to just create these raw waveforms in whatever engine we choose - the primary requirement is that these waveforms are free to change dynamically without any latency between player actions and waveform alteration/ distortion.
IMO, Sample collection for the purpose of musical use is probably a dead-end.. Both in terms of incorporating "authentic" samples into a "theremin control" interface (if we are trying to capture more than just a waveform, and think we can actually play a Claramin by loading samples from her theremin) and for replay on a keyboard or DAW.
But I am often wrong ;-) .... I am one of the people back in the Netscape days who would have taken a bet that the internet would never go anywhere.. ;-)
Fred.
"But here's the $64,000 question. Was Clara a top professional violinist? Did she play moderately well and by comparison the theremin seemed so much more difficult because she never attained the level of a true world-class virtuoso? " - Rich
"Born as Clara Reisenberg in Vilnius, Vilna Governorate (now Lithuania), Rockmore was a child prodigy on the violin and entered the Imperial conservatory of Saint Petersburg at the age of five. She studied violin under the virtuoso Leopold Auer, and remains to this day the youngest student ever to be admitted to the institution. Unfortunately, bone problems due to childhood malnutrition forced her to abandon violin performance past her teen years. That however led her to discover the newborn electronic instrument and become perhaps the most renowned player of the theremin."
http://www.nadiareisenberg-clararockmore.org/clara_biography.htm
========================================
I have done a quick search but come up with nothing -
Does anyone know of any recording of Clara playing the violin? ... I suspect that there isn't any, but would be real interested in hearing it if there was!