Is the concept of an electronic cello viable?
It was certainly an unusual and novel piece of electronic gadgetry back in 1931 when the late Leonid Bolotine was playing his theremincello on the stage of Radio City Music Hall but what advantages does the theremincello offer us today when we already have a vast array of widely available, relatively inexpensive ribbon control alternatives?
No less than TWO electronic cello devices are about to make their debut - Augusto Triani's theremincello, and David Levi's magnetic cello.
Last week, I received an update from engineering student, David "magnetovore" Levi, concerning his magnetic cello. He has been working hard on refining his instrument over the last year and is about ready to go into production (something he had planned to do months ago but the instrument wasn't ready).
http://www.gizmag.com/david-levi-magnetic-cello/22265/
Here again, we must ask ourselves, is this instrument really destined to be a valuable tool in the arsenal of the creative musician, or does it belong to the wonderful world of curiosities and toys?
An electronic instrument, in order to be creatively and commercially successful, must do at least ONE of two things: either it must provide musicians with entirely new sounds, or it must offer them new and simpler ways to make old sounds. (I am speaking here of actual instruments, not trigger devices such as the "laser harp" that are designed for show).
Are any of the new electronic cellos offering us new sounds? From what I have heard, the answer is no. There is nothing I have heard from any of them that could not be done on a keyboard.
Are the new electronic cellos easier to play than the acoustic cello? No, they are not. The magnetic cello has an advantage over the theremincello in that it has multiple "strings", but you still need to have acoustic cello skills in order to play it. If you need the same training to play the facsimile, and still the facsimile offers no sonic advantages over the instrument it is supposedly emulating, then what does it offer the musician?
The one instrument that does offer something genuinely new and different is the Haken "continuum", which allows the player to move in three dimensions (forward & backward, up & down, and left & right) on its neoprene interface. Unfortunately, the high price of the instrument has put it beyond the reach of most people. The continuum has hundreds of moving parts in it and is highly "labor intensive" for its manufacturer.
I hope all this doesn't sound like I'm trying to rain on everybody's electronic cello parade. I'm not! But I think a little reality check is probably a good thing from time to time.