"Used to like it. Now I hate it. That’s what the theremin has done to me." - Rich
LOL ;-)
What you say is true! .. Thanks Rich! .. My problem with the instrument is the volume control, but thinking about it, the core of this problem is probably that I am trying to mute the portamento!
There is no escape from portamento on a theremin - its there all the time.. So all one has is the speed at which one can move from a given to a target, and how much of this transition is allowed to be audible.
But here is the other theremin quirk, one which came up on the theremini thread and was IMO brilliantly expounded by Kevin and Dewster..
The only feedback from a theremin is audio - as a result, portamento on a reactive theremin will vary in speed depending on the distance between notes and the players control.. Its not like a keyboard with portamento where one plays the target note and knows the pitch will settle on that note - if (with a theremin) you want portamento, you must manually control this rate - and having no visual cues (and particularly if the instrument is non-linear or note positions change so one cannot establish 'muscle memory' from repeated practice with the instrument) I think this makes playing a lot harder.
If the instrument does not respond quickly (<10ms) difficulty and the potential for 'operator oscillation' increases, one probably gets a taste of the "theremini syndrome" at beyond 10ms, and full blown total unplayability when one gets even close to the theremini's 100ms.
I love portamento on synths - and its ok on theremins IMO to some degree - IMO one can get some really good music and play tunes on a good "one-stick" (pitch only) instrument, and these have permanent un-damped portamento.
"Here’s my big issue with the theremin: Accepted performance style dictates that portamento between disjunct notes is considered "bad practice". People have decided that it sounds bad, maybe because you don’t have the portamento issues on most other instruments. So we have decided that we need to get rid of it so that we can make the theremin sound like a "classical" instrument. This means a technique has to be developed to get rid of it (part of the now accepted art of playing the instrument for "traditionalists")."
Hmmm... Interesting perspective.
I need to ponder this a bit more - The theremin was first played in a "classical" way - but was this an "error"? Is this instrument (other than by the few who have devoted years to it, most of whom could have been masters of any instrument in the time they spent on the theremin) really suited to "classical" "traditional" "precision" playing?
Or is it perhaps best used where portamento is desired, where 'emulation' of other perfectly functional classical / acoustic instruments is not sought..
Been here before with synthesisers - IMO,they are best employed creating sounds that acoustic instruments cannot..
Yeah - For those few who take to the instrument and can master precision playing, great - but for the rest of us, and particularly those of us not interested in playing "the swan" - perhaps recognizing that the theremin (regardless of what anyone else says) is just a synthesiser (with a daft user interface ;-) would be liberating.
Fred.
(This is another of these "blasphemy/apostasy" issues I may completely change my mind about further down the line ;-)
Added ->
Its THE VOICE which is the problem! - Its the fact that we want (mostly I think) to use the theremin as a vocal 'substitute' and that the theremin is exceptionally well suited to this role..
That's what makes theremin portamento a pain in the rear end! ... Because the voice doesn't have permanent portamento, and because we have superb control of the dynamics of our voice..
I postulate that if there is a "problem" it may be down to articulation -if we could wire the theremin in a way that dynamics / volume was controlled by our mouth movement (or something like that) then the portamento "problem" would vanish.
Oh hell - Another thing I want / need to play with! - I really want to, because control of volume is what stops me from even trying to master the theremin.