"Fred, I am assuming from the above that you do not feel the Moog Etherwave is as playable as a "pro" instrument. Is this correct? " - Coalport.
I went into some detail about my personal inclinations regarding playability in earlier posts on this and preceding thread, and stated that I do not know if my subjective preferences apply to everyone.
Perhaps only a "pro" has the "right" to define a "pro" instrument.
Also, I do not really see the EW's price as "entry level" - I would like to see a really playable instrument (in a cheap plastic housing) available at under £200.
If so, why do you feel this way?
I just found every EW extremely difficult / impossible to play - Right back in the early days when I had my first lessons from Lydia and joined in the howling group sessions - I was able to play the T-Vox with no problem, and the EW-Pro with a little more difficulty, but it was still fine.. But I just could not get on with the EW - I found Gordon's Enkelaar easier to play!
As to "why" - I am nor sure - I think it may well be inconsistancy in the spacing, as in, its not just non-linear, its non-linear at both ends! - the "inverse" non-linearity at the bass end (as in, notes getting closer as one goes lower) really throws me - it feels completely unnatural, and is not so prevalent I think on instruments like the Tvox Epro or even the Enkelaar.
Do you think the available mods for the Etherwave improve it in any way?
I have not tried a "real" EW with "the available mods".. the "EW improvement" thread a couple of years ago started to look at bufferring the oscillators, which had the spin-off of decoupling these oscillators - this meant that the oscillators would not synchronise at the bass end (or at least, synchronisation would be greatly reduced) with the result that the compression of note intervals at the bass end would be greatly reduced.
I believe I was somewhat "misdirected" at that time, as someone who is an engineer and far better thereminist than I effectively advised that compression at the bass end was needed for playability - so I deliberately added oscillator coupling to retain this feature when I added the buffers.. Alas, I never trusted myself - To me, buffered oscillators (when I did not add deliberate re-coupling) and the resulting stretched bass field was far easier to play.
So, If this is what these "available mods" do (buffer the oscillators and therebye decouple them) then I am sure I would find the EW easier to play with the mod fitted.
What do you consider a "pro" theremin?
As I said - I think a "pro" is more qualified to answer that than I. "pro" or whatever, I think that playability is the key - I think it easier to define what I deem a "certainly not pro, and probably crap" theremin - Any theremin with usable playing field of less than 30cm.
I think that a good 'starter' theremin should probably have 3 to 4 octaves (no more!) of optimally spaced intervals over a playing field of about 50cm, with no more than about 20cm of unplayable field (as in, field which is grossly non-linear).. and that the distorted field should be close to the antenna, not at the bass end
I think the above could be extended to "intermediate" or "pro" levels by adding switchable registers, and retaining the playing 'span' at 3 to 4 octaves.
IMO, The above should be the foundation upon which extras are added (waveshape options etc) to taste - as in, semi modular perhaps.
The other important aspect of both a good starter and pro instrument is, IMO, the volume control - Almost all cheap theremins treat this as an unimportant component - I would have a control to allow changing of the position <-> volume response, so one could adjust for anything from "super snappy" to "extremely 'padded'" - (or certainly would have on a Pro instrument - probably have internal user accessible adjustment on a starter theremin) - I also think that both the "maximum volume" and the "silent" distances should be adjustable, so that these can be placed close together for stacato or further apart for more subtle control of dynamics.
But, when it came to declaring an instrument "pro" - I would probably only do this if someone like you or Lydia thought it was "pro" - My personal challenge once was to build a theremin Lydia liked so much that she was willing to swap her Tvox for it! ;-) LOL!
Fred.