[i]"I'd hate to see some day in the future when all the first theremins are dead and gone and someone goes "Man, I wish someone had made a really clean, technical recording of one of those". - Dae23 [/i]
Those were part of the reason I raised this issue - the other reasons include wanting to 'clear up' the issue of what a "real" Theremin "should" sound like, and wanting to have a "RCA" preset in my Theremin which was at least close to the real thing.
I do realise that there will never be any "absolutely definitive" sample.. I am sure that no two RCA's sounded exactly the same - that even ageing of the 'tubes will greatly affect the tone..
As I see it, we have (or had) several ways of listening to an RCA..
1.) Listening to a live performance of a new-ish RCA played through its speaker, back (say) Pre 1960.. Now impossible without the invention of a time machine.
2.) Listening to a recording of [1] above, made on recording equipment of the time, complete with the 'degradation' this equipment introduced.. I suspect that most of what we percieve the "RCA sound" to be comes from this source.
3.) listening to one of the remaining RCA's with its original speaker.
4.) Listening to [3] above, recorded using modern equipment, which will be quite close to what is heard in [3].
5.) Listening to the signal from an RCA taken directly into modern equipment.
It is not (or, I think, should not be) too difficult to process the signal from [4] to give the coloration added by old recording equipment ("Vintage radio").. And if one has samples of [5] and [4], it should even be possible to derive a 'model' for the RCA Speaker..
As I see it, the best starting point is probably to get samples of [4].. This would be (I think) the closest to the 'original' sound as heard by the audience.. This could be processed to get clean 'vintage' recording sound, which would probably be the sound we all know and love..
Of course, none of the above will do anything for our (or certainly my) playing technique or skills - And none of us is going to sound like Clara even if we had a perfect RCA emulation or a time machine..
[i]"Nothing had been changed. The "vintage" sound all had to do with the equally vintage recording equipment used in the 40's & 50's. In order to emulate that sound, I put the modern digital recording through an FX program called "Vintage Radio" and the RCA sounded exactly like it did 50 years ago." - Coalport [/i]
This is most interesting..
Was the recording you processed with "Vintage Radio" a recording of the RCA played through its original speaker 'miked up, or was it the RCA recorded directly?
Fred Mundell
Fundamental Designs Ltd.
Electronics Consultant.
<- See Profile Image for Email.
Designer of Theremins and other alternative electronic music controllers and instruments.