I suspect it is the note-on event button which lets you conclude that it [the MIDI Wave] is "superior" to the ethervox. In that limited sense I would agree. A note event trigger is fundamental to MIDI and I consider it a very welcome development.
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Gordon, I suspect from what you wrote above that you may not be familiar with all the "modes" of Ethervox MIDI theremin operation.
Bob Moog solved the problem of triggering note events in the Ethervox MIDI theremin in a very interesting and creative way that allows it to be done while playing, without touching the instrument or having to adjust knobs or push buttons.
There are four possible MIDI "modes" on the Ethervox:
PITCH MOVE MODE
CHROMATIC MODE
CONTROLLERS MODE
PITCH SMART MODE
In PITCH SMART MODE, as the left hand pulls away from the volume antenna, the amplitude of the volume control MIDI signal increases, just as the volume increases in a standard, traditional theremin. The instant the movement of the volume hand of the player is reversed, however, and moves toward the pitch antenna, in PITCH SMART a new MIDI "note on" message is sent with a "note on" velocity value equal to the last value displayed on the Ethervox performance screen. The "note on" number is determined by the position of the pitch hand in relation to the pitch antenna at the moment the "note on" message is generated by the volume hand.
With this approach, a "note on" command can be sent while playing with no need to leave the playing arc.
Through skilled use of PITCH SMART MODE, a thereminist can avoid attempting to pitch bend a MIDI receiver beyond its capabilities, and can maintain an even and consistent tone throughout the range of the piece being played. Many people who are unfamiliar with the way pitch bend information works, forget that with a sample of an instrument like a clarinet, the sound of the low 'G' is entirely different from the sound of the 'G' three octaves above it. The high 'G' is not just low 'G' pitch bent up three octaves.
If, for example, you were playing a sampled clarinet and triggering it with your MIDI Ethervox, and you wanted it to sound like a clarinet and not like a cat in heat in the back alley, you would use PITCH SMART MODE and change your MIDI note at intervals of about a major fourth. As with all things THEREMIN, your hand would need to be guided by your ear.
Of course, in all the modes in which it operates, the Ethervox performance screen tells you exactly what the instrument is doing at any given moment.