Amazing Grace - Etherwave+ playing Slim Phatty
OK. Interesting experiment. Never tried playing my Slim Phatty from my Etherwave Plus using the CV outs for any extended period before. Started by going through all the Slim Phatty patches to find one I wanted to use for Amazing Grace. Didn’t find one I liked. Either they were too harsh or they had too strong or fast envelopes that didn’t translate at all to the theremin gating - especially when that wonderful Moog filter opened up on a lot of them. So I decided to make a patch and try emulating a theremin-like sound. Started with a triangle wave (at the most sine-like setting) and synced the two oscillators two octaves apart. This created a sound with more harmonic complexity. Then I set volume and filter ADSR envelopes to slow settings that I thought would simulate a theremin well. Too fast an envelope would ruin the sound.
Then I connected the Etherwave Plus Volume, Pitch and Gate CVs. You need all three to transfer over the theremins expressive content and envelope shaping. This also is where Theremini CV falls flat on its face with only one CV out. Didn’t care about tuning any 1/V per octave between the slim phatty and theremin – as the theremin has the totally dynamic pitch range so I just found my starting note and I was off to the races.
Then I set up Cubase to play my Amazing Grace stereo String track and played the Etherwave/Slim Phatty line on a Mono track. Put 2C Audio Breeze reverb on both and EW Spaces String Hall convolution reverb on the mix. One last thing was to add Antares Aspire vocal processing as a plug in on the Slim Phatty track. This creates a bit more harmonic complexity (though things get a little hot here and there).
The resulting sound is rather theremin-like to my ears (there is no etherwave line output connected at all here - just CV outs to Slim Phatty). You could never do this with MIDI. Even though CV is as old as the Moog synthesizer itself, it's still relevant – especially for theremin/gestural control.
This experiment also kind of reinforces my feeling that I could care less what creates the back end sound of a theremin - be it traditional heterodyning oscillators / subtractive synthesis, additive, FM, samples, Wavetable (which can create dynamically changing sounds) or virtual modeling, etc. Who cares as long as the sound is nice. It's the front end that really makes it a "theremin" to me and almost anyone who sees it played I would expect. There are those who will say I'm not really playing a theremin here because the back end is a Moog synth. I'm only playing a "gestural controller". But then a theremin is 99% gestural controller in my mind so it really doesn't matter. The future of the theremin is all in the back end as if the front end changes, that's when I start saying it's not a theremin anymore.
Have to try now moving more towards the sawtooth wave and increasing filter resonance with a different envelope. I should be able to get a more vocal/glottal sound.