"Satisfied with the Fred's 1b, 1d and any of 3a...3e it is possible with model of hand (metal plate) drived by a servo and controlled in any way (midi-to-position engine, for example).Developing this idea you can provide the audio feedback to escape the R & D of note-to-position tabulation." - ILYA
Hi Ilya,
Yes, that would be a way of doing it! Build a 'robot' to do the difficult job of playing the theremin, while you have the easy job of playing the keyboard! LOL! - just use the wheel to add vibrato, hell, using a 2 axis controller you could control vibrato and tremelo while playing the keyboard - or use one axis to control portamento... You could even use the pitch bend to make it sound like a real theremin - make an occasional note slightly out of tune!
LOL - I love this idea! ;-) - With audio feedback your theremin could be as non-linear as hell, the robot wouldnt mind!
Fred.
Edit (added) 1 > Actually - this idea does have a great use! - As a demonstrator for a new theremin! ... The developer would not need to be able to play the theremin, keyboard or MIDI file would do it... One would get a perfect rendition regardless of how crap the theremins linearity actually was - As long as the theremin sounded ok, I expect they would sell bucketloads.
And end up a highly frustrated purchaser when one finds you cannot play the damn thing - you need to buy a robot costing $2k to actually play a tune!
Edit (added) 2 > To me, there is no logical reason to play a "theremin" in any other way than gestural.. With the exception of the "heterodyne" sound, all other reasons are questionable to absurd - you can do everything with the simplest analogue monophonic synth that you could do with a modified theremin connected to a keyboard - and converting a theremin would be a great effort, and be less stable or reliable than a synth.
The ONLY reason I can see which makes any sort of sense is if one wants the "heterodyne" sound - you cannot (I think) get a synth which produces sound by heterodyning, except for the odes martinot... But, to be honest, I am not sure that the "heterodyne sound" really exists! - Oh, I used to believe that I could tell the difference - but I now think this has more to do with the harmonics in most theremins being identified as "heterodyning" - correctly adjust your VCO waveshapes and VCF roll-off/tracking and you are damn hard pressed to hear any difference (or at least I am!).