[i]"A better Theremin WILL appear - I hope to be the person to provide this, but if it is not me, someone else will... And this will happen in 2009 (and most likely in the first half)"[/i]
The Epro is my primary theremin for two reasons:
1) it is linear for a five octave range
2) it has a range switch to shift the pitch by octave (the Epro has three positions resulting in a range of over seven octaves).
The Etherwave Standard is fine for melodic playing -- it does not have the linearity and the playable range that the Epro has.
For live-looping, I want more than a few octaves to play with.
Also, I desire a pitch-preview -- or at least a provision for one. I use both audio and visual pitch previews for live-looping applications.
I compose music that, at times, exploits the pitch preview (i.e., a work such as "Three-Legged Race" http://kevinkissinger.com/threeleggedrace.shtml would be unplayable without an audio pitch preview).
Another quality of the Epro that I like is the timbre switch (allows quick changes to preset timbres during a performance) plus a user-settable timbre position. The brightness control is effective in the Epro compared to the Standard.
The Standard's tone includes a high-frequency component that is NOT attenuated by the tone control. Thus, the tone of the Standard is always kind of "brassy". My solution is to run the Standard thru a parametric EQ and to roll off above 7khz. (There really isn't much above 7khz on a theremin anyway.)
The specific "sound" of the theremin is less important to me than the ability to control the tone. I want the ability to produce a clear, sine-like tone in addition to bright timbres.
The only issue with the Epro is that it is hard to travel with. If the case was just an inch shallower it would fit into standard luggage.
On the plus side, the Epro's front panel never fails to get enthusiastic "ooo's and ahhh's" from people.
Fred, look forward to finding out more about your theremin. I am very interested in any theremin entry into the "pro" market.
[i]-- Kevin[/i]
The Epro is my primary theremin for two reasons:
1) it is linear for a five octave range
2) it has a range switch to shift the pitch by octave (the Epro has three positions resulting in a range of over seven octaves).
The Etherwave Standard is fine for melodic playing -- it does not have the linearity and the playable range that the Epro has.
For live-looping, I want more than a few octaves to play with.
Also, I desire a pitch-preview -- or at least a provision for one. I use both audio and visual pitch previews for live-looping applications.
I compose music that, at times, exploits the pitch preview (i.e., a work such as "Three-Legged Race" http://kevinkissinger.com/threeleggedrace.shtml would be unplayable without an audio pitch preview).
Another quality of the Epro that I like is the timbre switch (allows quick changes to preset timbres during a performance) plus a user-settable timbre position. The brightness control is effective in the Epro compared to the Standard.
The Standard's tone includes a high-frequency component that is NOT attenuated by the tone control. Thus, the tone of the Standard is always kind of "brassy". My solution is to run the Standard thru a parametric EQ and to roll off above 7khz. (There really isn't much above 7khz on a theremin anyway.)
The specific "sound" of the theremin is less important to me than the ability to control the tone. I want the ability to produce a clear, sine-like tone in addition to bright timbres.
The only issue with the Epro is that it is hard to travel with. If the case was just an inch shallower it would fit into standard luggage.
On the plus side, the Epro's front panel never fails to get enthusiastic "ooo's and ahhh's" from people.
Fred, look forward to finding out more about your theremin. I am very interested in any theremin entry into the "pro" market.
[i]-- Kevin[/i]