Now, as for the actual content of this topic. I have played the flute for 3 years (as a child) and have now completed the sixth year I play the saxophone (I am now 17 years old). I have become interested in playing the theremin and wondered about what I should be able to do and know. I have decent relative pitch (I can figure out intervals with a maximum of two octaves easily) but I don't think I have any absolute pitch. Of course, you can mess around on a theremin without absolute pitch. But does it get you a serious advantage if you do have absolute pitch? Of course, having it means you can play any piece right from paper on the right tune. But just hearing some tune and then go on using relative pitch works for that too. The question is, does it help while playing? If so, does anyone know of anyone who learned an AP-lookalike skill later in his life (again, please do not quote your favorite scientific source on that it's not possible).
Compared to other people, I may not yet have a very good hand-eye coordination. Is this going to be a problem or is it just a matter of training?
Also, is there any musical theory I should be really really familiar with, except for intervals and the usual stuff?
Some small questions:
-When you get near an antenna, do you feel the electrostatic field? Or is it too weak for this?
-Is the electrostatic field strong enough to mess with artificial pacemakers? (not that I have one, but I might need to be careful with other peoples coming near my instrument (once I'd have one))
-Is it easier to improvise on a theremin than on a "normal" instrument?
-How long does it minimally take before you can produce a song people can recognize? Minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, years?