Aye, so I’m here just watching some repeat crap film on the telly when I had a rush of blood to the head and thought I’d post it here on TW, somewhere.
I hope this is the right forum...
I’ve been thinking a wee bit about the Theremini and wondered at it’s pitch correction as a means to aid (or not) learning to play the instrument.
I got to thinking what would make a learning aid and came upon the idea of a volume spike.
I’m sure that I’m not the first person to think of this but this thread is HUGE with LOTS of pages and, to my shame, I’ve not really been following it.
The idea is pretty simple.
Have a practice setting where the theremin acts as a pitch only and have notes in the scale present themselves louder than the off-notes.
So for example you would have a scale from C-àC’ with the notes in between
C—D—E—F—G—A—B—C’
If the normal volume was, say, V, then as you went up the scale the notes would play thus:
C(V*4)—D(V*2)—E(V*2)—F(V*2)—G(V*2)—A(V*2)—B(V*2)—C’(V*4) etc etc etc
The volume spike wouldn’t be just on or off like a square wave but would be more of the positive half of a sine wave where the perfect pitch would be at the apex. Maybe a saw wave shape.
Possibly there would be an adjustment to correct the width of the peak so that it could be tuned for extreme accuracy or a floppy accuracy. I’m sure you know what I’m getting at here.
Like I said, this has probably been suggested before.
Ok, going back to a darkened room now...
R