I just got my Etherwave Standard back from Moog Music, and parked it near my Etherwave Pro, and started messin' around with the theremins. I have to turn the volume on the amp down a bit, and play them like they were matryomins, but you can get some cool effects going.
It sucks that my digiverb can't handle the input from two signals run through a splitter, so i'll have to use a mixer to use the cool effects on both theremins at the same time.
At first it sounded like a cat fight in a sewer pipe, but after about 20 minutes my left arm started to coordinate better with the right, and I've started being able to play some chords. I doubt if I'll ever do that in public, but you never know.
The hardest thing to do is keep both in tune with each other because the Standard is non linear, and the Pro is "more" linear, and has a wider range too.
I'm thinkin' about pickin' up another standard to evin things out a bit.
Might be cool, if not bizar if I could sit on a stool, and work the volume antennae whith my feet, or knees while the arms do the pitch work.
Then again, they might come to take me away, or the audience, which ever goes nuts first.
It sucks that my digiverb can't handle the input from two signals run through a splitter, so i'll have to use a mixer to use the cool effects on both theremins at the same time.
At first it sounded like a cat fight in a sewer pipe, but after about 20 minutes my left arm started to coordinate better with the right, and I've started being able to play some chords. I doubt if I'll ever do that in public, but you never know.
The hardest thing to do is keep both in tune with each other because the Standard is non linear, and the Pro is "more" linear, and has a wider range too.
I'm thinkin' about pickin' up another standard to evin things out a bit.
Might be cool, if not bizar if I could sit on a stool, and work the volume antennae whith my feet, or knees while the arms do the pitch work.
Then again, they might come to take me away, or the audience, which ever goes nuts first.