Randy wrote: Many people who are long time thereminists, beginner theremin players or casual theremin hobbyists are unable to know an edited performance from one that is not edited. This creates a divide and gives you a technological advantage that is invisible to many people.
As I see it, the name of the game is ENTERTAINMENT. The notion that the full use of all the technology that is available to us in the creation of an audio/visual work is somehow misleading unless the magic is exposed, seems to me like a rather ingenuous point of view. Would it make sense for a magician to reveal his secrets, so that his audience is no longer mystified? I mean...gee...some of the people in the audience might think the blond actually was cut in two! If this is truly the way you feel, you had better advise the music industry because it has been creating videos for more than thirty years in which every “invisible” trick in the book is used!
As an artist, your first duty is to YOURSELF. If you feel that it is somehow incumbent upon you to show the world how difficult it is to play the theremin then by all means go that route, but I doubt many are going to follow your lead!
Some of my favorite recording artists are TERRIBLE in concert, but live performance is a very different art form. Great film actors are often disappointing on stage - and vice versa. We live in an increasingly technological era and I think we are fully justified in using that technology in any way we want, without any need to explain it or make excuses for it.
The late Glenn Gould, one of the finest keyboard virtuosos of the 20th century, wrote in 1984: “In an unguarded moment some months ago, I predicted that the public concert as we know it today would no longer exist a century hence, that its functions would have been entirely taken over by electronic media. It had not occurred to me that this statement represented a particularly radical pronouncement. Indeed, I regarded it almost as self-evident truth and, in any case, as defining only one of the peripheral effects occasioned by developments in the electronic age. But never has a statement of mine been so widely quoted - or so hotly disputed.”
Ironically, the vast majority of theremin videos these days actually DO demonstrate how difficult it is to play the instrument but the players themselves seem woefully unaware of it!