"My daughter will be 17 in October and for some time has been saying she wants a theremin." - cei477
It is, I think (at least from my expierience) quite unusual for a 17 year old to be interested in such a strange musical instrument.. has she ever played a theremin, and has she played / does she play any other musical instrument? What sort of music is she into? Some idea about why she wants a theremin, and what she hopes to do with it, might help.
"She is musical but I know theremins are difficult beasts to play. She may give up on the theremin so I don't want to pay too much for an instrument."
Here is the crunch - not all theremins are equal.. a cheap instrument may be a lot more difficult to play than a more expensive one - so I think the likelyhood of her giving up is higher if she gets a cheap one.. Not to say that she wont give up if she gets an expensive one though..
Also, (and I am not a musician - I am a theremin designer primarily) I have found that some people get on with different models better than others - I think it is quite a personal thing.
Alas, there are no music shops I know of in the UK where people can try out different theremins.. but there are occasional workshops held in Oxford run by Lydia Kavina where one can get a chance to play and some tuition from probably the best theremin teacher on earth.. Sadly, there doesnt seem to be a workshop scheduled any time soon..
From whats available, I agree with Thierry - The Moog Etherwave is probably the best bet.. These theremins also have a good resale value even on Ebay, so if your daughter didnt get on with it, some of the cost could be recovered, and the loss would probably be the same as if one bought a cheaper theremin which has a lower resale value.
Fred.
She has very catholic tastes in music. Off the top of my head she likes pop music from every decade (from Beach Boys to Radiohead), Sinatra, Nat King Cole, classical. She likes ambient music (Eno, Budd). She really is a musical magpie. She plays the piano (is Grade 6 level). Not sure what was "she wants to do" with the instrument (except play it presumably).
I do take your point about playability vs quality. I saw a few youtube videos of some chap playing the B3 which is what initially attracted me to it. But if import duties and power converters and Uncle Tom Cobley inflate the price then I can see how the Moog instrument becomes more attractive.
I have taken up Thierry's suggestion and contacted Wilco Botermans. Thanks to everyone for getting back to me.
The feedback has prompted a few more queries: I would agree that most 17 year olds are not exactly "theremin aware" but what sort of people become thereminists? Is there a stereotype? What attracted you to theremins? The "do" question - I did not understand. What sort of things do people "do" with theremins? What are the options?
Thanks