Amethyste wrote:
I think it is normal when you listen to a piece played by a proficient thereminist that there will be little off key notes here and there, and I am prepared for that....
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As thereminists, we are all off key all the time. It's just a matter of degree.
A few years ago I did an experiment on the Levnet. Several different versions of the same piece were presented to listeners and all were recorded with different degrees of flatness or sharpness. Each sample was consistently "off" by anywhere from 10 to 40 cents relative to the absolute pitch of the accompaniment (one "cent" = a hundredth of a semitone). I didn't use a theremin for the samples. I used a synthesizer instead, in order to precisely control the amount of deviation from the exact pitch.
What we found was that people were more sensitive to flatness than to sharpness, and degrees of acceptability among listeners varied enormously from 10 cents to nearly 40 cents (50 cents is a quarter tone).
What was intolerably off key for one listener, was quite enjoyable for someone else.
Most precision theremin performances are considered wildly successful if the player manages to get through the piece without going seriously (more than a quarter tone) out of tune.
When it comes to judging our own output, many of us tend to mistake our deep personal involvement with what we are doing, for the quality of our work. This is the value of regular lessons with a good teacher - he or she will force you to keep your eye on the ball by never allowing you to become seduced by yourself.
One of the dangers of YouTube videos is that mediocre theremin playing is often encouraged by adoring comments from people who are quite sincere but who don't know their arse from their elbow! We must beware of these individuals because, if we listen to them, we will not grow. It is an insidious trap!
The theremin-playing community consists largely of self-taught amateurs with a great love of music but no prior musical training, musical knowledge, or professional experience. Clara always insisted that "the theremin should never be anyone's first instrument because you can't learn music on it", but with many thereminists it is exactly that - their first and only instrument. Many people assume that "learning music" consists of learning to read notes, but that's not it at all. A large part of learning music is learning to hear yourself - to hear what you ARE doing instead of what you THINK you are doing and to strive toward what it is possible for you to do.
For many people, the theremin is a magical, musical mirror in which their reflection is always beautiful. It has often been compared to "the emperor's new clothes". The emperor himself, along with his adoring subjects, actually see ermine-lined brocaded silks and satins when, to the innocent eye of a child, his most glorious majesty is as naked as a jaybird!