"Dew I have mentioned before that my vacuum tube designs did not have any drift. The audio remained on the same musical note over a 10-degree F room temperature change, from night to morning. I used a 100 volt zener to keep the plate voltage stable. Without it I could hear the pitch very slightly rise and fall with AC power line fluctuations." - Christopher
Interesting. How about drift at start-up? Sitting around waiting for the thing to stabilize must be a spontaneity killer (one reason I hate long boot times in digital musical instruments - warmup is analog boot time). Theremin's own designs had a "standby" position on the power switch, so even the master's stuff must have taken a while to stabilize at turn-on. I want my own personal Theremin to snap to attention and be ready at a moment's notice without being a vampire or me having to somehow anticipate my own spontaneity (need a time machine).
"What I learned over the years is there may not be any significant advantage to using tubes today."
There are clearly obvious and definite disadvantages to the use of tubes today, which is why - except for a few tiny niches - they're basically gone from electronics. The downsides are so severe that even if they were the ONLY way to get the BEST Theremin tone <insert other highly subjective criteria here> I'd continue to eschew the use of them in my own designs. I'd conjecture that the current interest in tube Theremins is mostly quaintly historical (not that there's anything wrong with that).
Are there any modern Theremin virtuosos who prefer tube Theremins, particularly for public performance? With the exception of a Peter Pringle performance here and there, and those from the distant past, virtually all the web video performances I've seen feature transistorized Theremins (though absence of evidence...).