[Edited to add : As I have no sound acquisition equipment/software, I edited my post to give a better understanding of the "ghost tone" I can hear]
Hi everyone,
I hope I am posting this question at the right place. If not, please let me know.
I am a brand new theremin learner with zero previous experience in electronic music (musician though). I received my brand new Etherwave Standard + ESPE01 module this week, and have just tested it tonight (got the flu, couldn't do it earlier).
My problem is the following :
I hear an "extra" (deeper) tone when I play tones across the 4th and 5th octaves (the 1st octave being the one closest to the pitch antenna). More precisely, between the 4th F and the 5th A. [Edited to say : I mistakenly numbered the octaves backwards, not knowing octaves were conventionally numbered from the lower to the higher registers. However, this is pure convention and the problem remains]
[Edited to add : I can hear the "extra" tone following the progression of the tones I'm playing. It is not a constant pitch tone. It really confuses me, as I am trying to constantly correct my pitch. I hear the "extra" tone so clearly I can sing it. It is truly a handicap, as I cannot exercise in this specific range.]
I made a schema/picture of the problem, but it seems I couldn't upload it in this message, so it is now my avatar. Please have a look if you feel so inclined. [Edited to say : the schema is below]
My extra problem is the following : I am a total newbie, so I don't trust myself not to make a really stupid mistake. So before I contact the nice person who built my theremin (Thank you Wilco !!!) I wanted to hear your suggestions.
I wanted to had : I hear the "extra" tone whether I'm using headphones or my studio speaker (Yamaha MSP-5) [Edited to say : Both headphone amplifier and studio speaker work on ungrounded power supply. So I am unable at this time to test the theremin with a grounded sound output equipment :(]. I also checked all connectors, and it seems fine.
I really want to believe it is something stupid, like a faulty jack cable.
Dear experienced/knowledgeable people : what do you think ?
Please help !
Thank you,
Emmanuelle