Hi Dewster,
Back in the early days, the synthesiser was a niche interest and the only ones really exploring and using it were experimentalists, sound-effects (film studios) and the like - it wasn' really available or of use to 'normal' folks or 'normal' musicians - Because of its huge potential, the user interface was complex, and they were mostly keyboard-less.
Bob Moog's pioneering work centered IMO on the interface - He provided a standard and familiar input devices (keyboard) and simplified the synthesizer, making it accessible to the public.
I wonder if some wanna-be Bob at Moog Music thought they could do the same for the theremin? If so, they haven't looked at the history - The history is that, in developing the synthesizer (leading to the Mini Moog) Bob consulted intensively with musicians who were using the synthesizers of the time .. It was THEM who he answered to, and them he took advice from.. Bob never went out and looked at what he could make that would appeal to masses of synthesis ignorami to try to bring out an instrument to appeal to them.
IMO, the lack of consultation with those who know and really play theremins, and the focus / market they have targeted, makes any likely-hood of them designing something appealing to the theremin community almost zero.
For me, the question is this - What might have happened to the analogue synthesiser if Bob had not consulted with synthesists and had instead of producing the Mini Moog produced something that appealed to the "masses" but was of little use to musicians?
I think its possible that such a scenario could have killed the analogue synthesis revolution at birth (just as cheap crap digital synths stalled the revolution for years - folks selling their analogue and buying digital and relying on the preset sounds because they were impossible to program) . I fear that the theremini could impact adversely on interest and appreciation for all theremins, but particularly that it could throw a massive spanner in the works for digital theremins, right at the critical point where people like you are on the verge of starting this revolution.
So I personally dont think "disparaging" is unjustified in any way! The theremini DOES represent a major threat to any positive feelings folks have about theremins, and DOES threaten the advancement of theremins, and developers (both analogue and digital) have good reason to fear the lowering of the bar by Moog - Because Moog had always been the standard we tried to attain or better.
Fred.