Hi Jason,
In the description of what a Theramin is, you mistakenly state that "playing the theremin requires precise skill and perfect pitch", when in fact this is nowhere near the case. Perfect pitch is described as "the ability of a person to identify or recreate a musical note without the benefit of a known reference".
The fact that theremin players need to slide to their first note is proof of players not having perfect pitch. If they did, they would be able to produce any note upon request with no reference or sliding at all.
Secondly, having a piano accompanist definitely qualifies as a "known reference". All playing with an accompanist requires is a decent sense of relative pitch. Which nearly anyone can be trained to have, given enough teaching. Having perfect pitch would mean that any theremin player could play a song in any key upon request with no accompaniment and without being given a note to start from.
The theremin is KNOWN for being naturally out of tune. If theremin players really had perfect pitch, this would never be the case.
Saying that a theremin player has perfect pitch is like saying that an acoustic bass player or slide trombone player has perfect pitch. While this may occasionally be the case, it is by no means required to excel at the instrument. I'd imagine that being a theremin player with perfect pitch would drive one a little crazy, being constantly surrounded by music that's out of tune.
In the description of what a Theramin is, you mistakenly state that "playing the theremin requires precise skill and perfect pitch", when in fact this is nowhere near the case. Perfect pitch is described as "the ability of a person to identify or recreate a musical note without the benefit of a known reference".
The fact that theremin players need to slide to their first note is proof of players not having perfect pitch. If they did, they would be able to produce any note upon request with no reference or sliding at all.
Secondly, having a piano accompanist definitely qualifies as a "known reference". All playing with an accompanist requires is a decent sense of relative pitch. Which nearly anyone can be trained to have, given enough teaching. Having perfect pitch would mean that any theremin player could play a song in any key upon request with no accompaniment and without being given a note to start from.
The theremin is KNOWN for being naturally out of tune. If theremin players really had perfect pitch, this would never be the case.
Saying that a theremin player has perfect pitch is like saying that an acoustic bass player or slide trombone player has perfect pitch. While this may occasionally be the case, it is by no means required to excel at the instrument. I'd imagine that being a theremin player with perfect pitch would drive one a little crazy, being constantly surrounded by music that's out of tune.