Too Close Encounters
I often think about what voices might work best with Theremin, particularly in a performance setting. It's really interesting to have a varied assortment at your fingertips, but how useful are they really? They force you to play quite differently if you want them to sound as realistic as possible, which seems like a positive "stretching" sort of thing. And it's instructive to craft, say, a bass clarinet sound within a given synth architecture. But is ultra-realism all that useful? I mean, we've all seen/heard keyboardists do distorted guitar and it looks like fun, but it almost always comes across as kinda pathetic - what's the point? What is the use case other than noodling around or goofing off? Is there any way to genuinely use it musically? If I want to hear an electric guitar, please play that, there are too many "tells" when a keyboard is used as the controller of a guitar sound - the voice itself may be perfect, but the performance will always be a poor approximation of the real thing.
The Haken Continuum is faced with this conundrum too. The synth lashed to it is absolutely incredible, but is the best use of it to exactly produce squeaking strings? Honking woodwinds? I'm not faulting the creators for working on these kinds of voices, I do the same thing (but with necessarily inferior results).
Does this account for some the attraction to analog synths, that they aren't usually trying to ape traditional acoustic instruments?
Some Theremins offer a middle ground between the boring oscillator sound and hyper-realistic traditional sounds by being string-like in some registers and female-like in others. But it's a tough row to hoe via the vagaries of heterodyning and coupling, and some enhanced form of this might be more ideal. I do think formants and resonators offer a lot of promise in this direction, and the analog synth approach not so much. The suggestion of a natural sound, or a blend of them, might make for the most versatile type of Theremin voice. Something that obviously isn't trying too hard to emulate a specific instrument.
That said, I can't stop playing human vocals - the more human the better! - on the D-Lev. The magic of C fields coupled to the magic of a simulated vocal tract go together perfectly.