"Bob Moog may be supportive of the Theremini depending on the dynamics of his business. I doubt he would be working on a replacement for the EW Pro." - bisem
Speculation about what Bob would be doing, or what he would want to be doing, if he was still with us - Hmmm.. Difficult, and perhaps dangerous / foolish.. But I am a fool! ;-)
I suspect that if Bob had been free to do whatever he wanted with his time, and had not been "trapped" by commercial constraints and partners / shareholders / whatever, we would have seen many more great theremins from Moog.. And if he was here today I think there would have been some heated arguments over the theremini - For one thing, I am almost sure he would have fought the plastic toaster style! That just isnt anything like what Bob would do or allow IMO!
But even the E-Pro was, I think, limited by someone else at Moog - There is a lack of care in its design - not just to reduce cost, but more to rush it to production (the absurd expensive switch mode PSU plonked into it for example - ok, I may be talking out my rear-end here - but I am sure a better suited supply could have been designed and fitted for lower cost).
To me, it looks like Bob lost control of the company long before he left us - I think that, from a commercial perspective, whoever had real control was far better at making the company profitable than Bob ever was or ever could have been.. I think that with this commercial control, AND with Bob's input, things were much more balanced, but still tilted away from creativity a bit..
Now, without Bob, I think the new Moog is moving away from everything he represented - consultation with musicians replaced probably by consultation with "style" and "marketing" people [as suggested by Dewster] (with the new target market, theres no need to talk to musicians anymore!) - Plastic replacing wood, digital replacing analogue- and worst, by far - Dishonest or at least questionable inferences being put out, while real data (linearity, latency, quality sound bites and/or video) arent forthcoming.. your "If Moog really wanted to promote this theremin why don't they at least spend as much time and money on a promotional video as good as the "Polyphonic Theremin" that they produced a few years ago for April Fools Day?" puts the issue brilliantly into perspective IMO - The reason I think is that they want to promote the theremini in the least informative way possible.(I really hope I am wrong on this, and that no deliberate mis-information is happening)
"We are all very passionate for our theremin and desperately want to see alternatives to what is available now but we also have to realize that it may never happen. At least we still have the EWS "
<personal rant now follows-> Yes, there is a lot of passion - If there is any "hero" in my life, and if I was to name one person who influenced my life more than any other - particularly in terms of chosen career, but also on many other levels, it must be Bob Moog.. Not due to theremins, I must add - due to synthesisers.. As a lad of about 12, living in South Africa, I was getting patents of Moogs inventions and articles by him sent to me, and they cost about 3 months pocket money each - I ended up making and selling littl radios just to fund my obsession, LOL ;-) Then I came to the UK with one big trunk - in it was a polyphonic synthesiser I had designed and built while effectively under house arrest in SA - At the newsagent on arrival at Southampton, I picked up a magizine anouncing the Moog polyphonic synthesisers launch - it was far better than what I had in my trunk, and at a lower price than I could have managed! - Soon after settling in the UK I worked as a designer for a London synthesiser manufacturer - always playing "catch up" with the amazing Bob Moog, until (IMO crappy) polyphonic digital synths appeared at low cost and wiped us out - Oh, they were great for replacing EP's and the like, and FM synths did give some great sounds, but they never came close to the richness of free-phase analogue IMO - Wonderful as the DX7 was, even the low-end PolyMoog keyboard was far superior as a synth IMO.
So for me its the kind of passion that goes real deep - irrationally deep.. almost religeous.. LOL ;-) .. Yeah, I know there will be folks on other synth forums reading this and laughing their socks off while taking a break from playing with their software synths on their DAW's - I use these too! ;-) - Some of them are great, but none of them can produce a theremin sound that I could be convinced by even if I control them with a capacitive sensor.. And I cant get as good a lead "MiniMoog sound" from any of them as I can get from my real little Moog Prodigy - an instrument which Bob had no involvement with, but which didnt deviate grossly from his ideas - unlike the Theremini appears to.
One can get extremely close to a "theremin sound" using even quite simple analogue synthesis - but I have never managed to get close with any digital synthesis (reasons for this could also be down to getting the data into the engine - my experiments used MIDI and portamento - but comparing analogue and digital synths drivrn in the same way, analogue sounds much more like a theremin than digital) - I believe its probably possible if the digital synthesis is specifically engineered correctly, but have seen no evidence YET that the theremini is so engineered.
And lastly, it may just be that I am a delusional fool - that I think I can hear a difference, but that if tested under lab conditions it would turn out that I cant - I have tried doing A/B testing of myself, but its impossible.. Id need about 100 samples from real theremins, analogue emulations, and digital emulations - and to not know which was which - then sort them into what I thought they were, and see if I got any statistically valid corrolation or not... I would really love to know, regardless of the results..
Fred.