OT - Not about the Theremini..
"to give the instruments a truly musical sound like a human voice which changes completely its character when moving from the chest voice to the head voice. " - Thierry
The peculiar irony is that you are completely right on this IMO, but also (IMO) a little wrong! ;-)
When it comes to vocal charactaristics, if singing "ahh" in a bass register, then moving up and singing "ahh" in a higher register, the "ahh" formants remain nearly constant (and this is true for whatever one is singing - each vowel or whatever has its own formant pattern) - But it is because they stay constant that the waveform (harmonic mix) changes as the pitch changes..
To achieve a human voice sound, one doesnt really need to alter the excitation waveform much, if at all - but to make a realistic voice which isnt just doing an unnaturally constant vowel, one needs to change the vowel filters.
I see voice simulation as an entirely seperate process to waveform generation etc -I think that dynamic change of the waveform is needed more for other sounds than for voacl sounds - but that one can have both simultaneously.. You can change the waveform and feed this to a formant filter, the output waveform can then have mixable degrees of "direct" or "formant processed" qualities. biggest problem is the number of knobs required to enable all the mixing possibilities! ;-)
I suspect the reasons why Lev's theremins had more vocal quality than modern theremins comes down to the technology used - in particular the audio transformers - This is where, IMO, you got it right when we were discussing the Lev mixer - I think I grossly underestimated their importance -
The mixer was also hugely important in producing an excitation signal that is extremely close to the larynx waveforms - Trying to work out what was changing the raw waveform from the mixer into the rich "vocal" waveform, I am now almost sure that it can only be the transformers and related resonances that are doing this..And thats good news if its true - because its quite easy to implement formant filters using gyrators etc.. and simulation is starting to yield audio results that I am starting to like ;-)
Fred.
I dont yet know the mechanism which moves the formants (they only move a little - and the formants are a bit strange - not exactly human at all .. this may be the key - or it may just be an analysis error due to the low quality samples)
And oh yes - I completely agree that wavetable is the wrong way to go - but I suspect you know this by now! ;-)