Moog Theremini!

Posted: 1/23/2014 11:43:02 AM
ErMan

From: Rome (Italy)

Joined: 7/1/2012

A great news from Moog Music.

Here an article (only in Italian language) by Enrico Cosimi, but I think there we'll be more articles in the next days! 

http://www.audiocentralmagazine.com/moog-theremini/

Moog Theremini

 

Posted: 1/23/2014 12:47:28 PM
Thierry

From: Colmar, France

Joined: 12/31/2007

Who cares? It's not a true theremin, it's a gesture controlled digital synth. Leon Theremin and Clara Rockmore are revolving in their tombs...

Can't understand why Moog print their name on that. "Fisher price" would be a better suited trade mark.

Posted: 1/23/2014 3:02:47 PM
FredM

From: Eastleigh, Hampshire, U.K. ................................... Fred Mundell. ................................... Electronics Engineer. (Primarily Analogue) .. CV Synths 1974-1980 .. Theremin developer 2007 to present .. soon to be Developing / Trading as WaveCrafter.com . ...................................

Joined: 12/7/2007

Hey!  That looks like a toaster!!

I designed a musical toaster once, for a wealthy member of the Saudi Royal Family (oh, I never knew the person - simply a job via a client) who wanted a toaster with a synthesiser built into it (Yes - Its true! - I aint makin it up! ;-)..

I wonder if this person had antyhing to do with this "theremin" ?

"Can't understand why Moog print their name on that." - Thierry

I think the "Moog" we once knew and loved has now died.. and the company he left is just a company out to sell whatever they can and make profit. Moog was once (rightly or wrongly) a synonym for analogue, innovation and quality - That (And Bob Moog) was all they had to set them apart from the others..

This, to me, is the final straw - the indicator that the Moog we knew is no more.

But this instrument will have a market (depending on its price) and could throw a substantial spanner in the works for those developing quality digital theremins. One look at its shape, size and loop tells us that absolutely no thought has gone into what thereminists want or need -

" it's a gesture controlled digital synth. Leon Theremin and Clara Rockmore are revolving in their tombs..."

Wouldnt surprise me if Bob was as well..

Fred.

Posted: 1/23/2014 3:30:22 PM
Amethyste

From: In between the Pitch and Volume hand ~ New England

Joined: 12/17/2010

you know.. I felt kind of insulted when I read that this "theremin" has pitch correction assist.

Really? I felt that all of my hard years of intense practice were suddenly gone into nothingness ~ It pi$$ed me off!! (still does)

 

Posted: 1/23/2014 3:55:35 PM
Chobbs

From: Brooklyn,NY

Joined: 12/1/2009

Guys you gotta look at the positives...like having a built-in kensington lock slot. Finally someone is listening to the demands of musicians.

Posted: 1/23/2014 5:18:30 PM
Detlev

From: Annaberg-Buchholz, Germany

Joined: 10/29/2012

I'm looking forward to watching the thousands of new youtube-videos!

Posted: 1/23/2014 6:00:34 PM
dewster

From: Northern NJ, USA

Joined: 2/17/2012

[BEGIN 2021-03-12 ADDITION]

New readers may not like what lies ahead in this thread.  Being an open forum and all, people tend to let their hair down and say what's on their mind, and that's generally a good thing.  But over time many new folks have internalized the largely constructive criticism here, and then felt a need to lash out and leave TW. 

The Theremini is a real outlier, with interesting and unusual features, but it also has many serious issues that potential customers / players should be aware of up-front.  All Theremins have their good and bad points, and it may be that the positives outweigh the negatives at this point in your Theremin journey, making the Theremini a good fit for you personally.  But others have come to an opposite conclusion for their own reasons, and that doesn't necessarily make them wrong or "haters", and to imply those who freely provide useful product information are all simply bad faith actors is quite bewildering.

We're all doing our best to navigate and select from the limited offerings available, and that requires information that manufacturers can't /won't normally supply.  So we're largely on our own, but can help each other out, and that's probably the best way to take this thread.

[END 2021-03-12 ADDITION]

Interesting! 

- The tuner looks like it gives you the note letter and offset - I don't think this is very intuitive, and an LCD probably isn't fast enough for a real-time tuner display.

- The feet, like on the EWS, imply you can just set it on a table or something and play it.  I wonder if this is possible (like it isn't on the EWS)?

- I'm kinda partial to internal speakers, even if they sound like crap, because it reduces the fiddling around for casual use.

- Variable strength pitch correction is probably the most interesting thing in the feature list.

- Looks like a big cross on the bottom reflecting off the table it's sitting on - I wonder what that is? I think it's storage for the antenna.

- "Built in 3/8” Mic stand and Camera stand adaptor" - I think maybe a camera tripod might be a better stand then a mic stand?

- "User selectable range: highest note and lowest note (stored per preset)" - Hmm, adjustable sensitivity?

Posted: 1/23/2014 7:09:30 PM
Thierry

From: Colmar, France

Joined: 12/31/2007

I guess it's not adjustable RF sensitivity but just the conversion ratio between whatever capacitive sensing and the audio pitch frequency...

Posted: 1/23/2014 8:20:11 PM
GordonC

From: Croxley Green, Hertfordshire, UK

Joined: 10/5/2005

"I think maybe a camera tripod might be a better stand then a mic stand?"

Camera tripods are designed to keep the thing they are supporting from wobbling, which is good.

OTOH, the connecting bolt is a lot smaller than a nice big chunky mic stand attachment, which I'm not keen on - and they look terrible on stage.

Posted: 1/23/2014 8:39:54 PM
FredM

From: Eastleigh, Hampshire, U.K. ................................... Fred Mundell. ................................... Electronics Engineer. (Primarily Analogue) .. CV Synths 1974-1980 .. Theremin developer 2007 to present .. soon to be Developing / Trading as WaveCrafter.com . ...................................

Joined: 12/7/2007

" I felt that all of my hard years of intense practice were suddenly gone into nothingness ~ It pi$$ed me off!! (still does)" - Amey

I have heard this reaction many times to suggestions about making the theremin easier to play or ideas like I had (have) of "On-Key-Emphasis" which makes the volume from the theremin louder the closer to correct pitch one gets..

I personally dont understand this reaction from skilled / precision thereminists - Surely you people know that its the ability to get the pitch you want, when you want it - the ability to modulate and glide without any artificial machine imposed constraints - its these things which make you great! .. The fact that you can get the right semitone within a few cents on a theremin is awesome - but you can get this from any keyboard! - As soon as some process imposes this on the theremin, it imposes restriction on the expression possible with the theremin.

No one can compete against skill aquired by someone like you, Amey! - Or at least no-one who hasnt devoted a similar number of hours to perfecting your skill..

Sure - There will be a load of "Walk off the Earth" types posting their "Greatest theremin recording ever" videos they did a week after buying their new Moog toy - And it will come down to their devotees believing the crap (like those who watched the video of "Walk off the Earth" who couldnt recognise that it was entirely fake, had no theremin playing, had been produced on a keyboard) and arguing that it was great.. One cannot help morons like that!

"I'm looking forward to watching the thousands of new youtube-videos!" - Detlev

Not me! - I HATE the idea of having to wade through even more piles of crap just to find a rare snippet of someone who can actually play theremin to a degree which isnt mundane or painful.. I expect a massive increase in mundane rubbish with perhaps a reduction in "painful" due to the auto-tune..

I fear that this instrument could be the beginning of the end of enthusiasm for theremins - If the price is low enough that loads of wanna-be's buy one and pummel you-tube with rubbish, then boredom with the whole theremin concept could easily set in - and the theremin be confirmed as a toy for illiterate musical wanna-be's.

Bob Moog re-kindled interest in the theremin and was probably more responsible for it being here today, and not just a historic novelty, than any other person. I fear that Moog Music may now be launching a product which could return the theremin to near oblivion.

Bring out a GOOD theremin with extra features and even auto-tuning, yeah - but bring out a toy with these features - a toy which is unusable and/or undesirable to "real" musicians, brand it "Moog" and dump it on the market, and IMO one has a mix with the potential do do serious damage to the theremin's possible future.

Fred.

I must just say that these comments MIGHT be premature and even wrong - They are based on the pictures and specification.. But there are glaring indicators that this instrument is little more than a sophisticated musical toy.

I wonder if theyve bothered to put any ESD protection into that toaster?

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