Amanda "xoadc" states below:
I'm an artist about to embark on a rather ambitious project of buiding 13 theremins, that I will run through a pitch to midi converter into a Max MSP patch to trigger audio recordings that I made by placing home made contact microphones onto shortwave radio towers. The project is called Requiem for Radio, and it's about the demolition of the Radio Canada International shortwave radio site (the site was torn down last year). There were 13 radio towers on that site, and I recorded the sounds of each one of them, so I plan to build 13 theremins, 1 for each of the towers, and I will set them up as a scale model, with their distances from one another, and antenna heights relative to the towers they represent. The finished project will have two incarnations: 1. as an art gallery installation where the public can enter and play the ghosts of the radio towers with radio waves, and 2. as a performance where the theremin / towers are played by dancers.
I have never built my own theremin before. Well, I've built optical theremins on a bread board, but that doesn't count. Aside from a few basic electronics workshops, I am mostly self taught, but am pretty handy with a soldering iron.
I don't play the theremin yet either. I'm not sure if I want the theremins I build to even make sound, since I am only using them as controllers. but still, if I am building 13 of them, I figure I should learn how to play.
However, since I'm building 13 of them, I want to do it well, and I want to really understand every aspect of them and how they work.
-- Currently I am borrowing a Theremax 9505 from a friend. But I'm ready to start building now.
-- I plan to buy one Etherwave Plus kit to get started... so that I have a solid pro instrument for learning to play.
-- Then I plan to buy a PAiA kit, so that I can build an entire circuit board from scratch and get more comfortable with the electronics.
-- I'm also working on a super simple one this week, based on the schematic I found in this youtube video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nsxaoH9DjDo
Essentially, I want to find the most stripped down schematic possible... so that I can wrap my head around how it actually works on the most basic electronic level.
--I also found the schematic for the Thierrymin in the forums here (Thanks Thierry!)... I will build one of those as well...
I figure that after building an Etherwave, a Theremax, that super simple polish one from the youtube video, and the Thierrymin... I should then *hopefully* have a relatively solid understanding of what's going on in the circuits. *hopefully*.
amanda - oh, and I'm on the east coast of Canada... Moncton, NB...
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Hello amanda,
Your art project is challenging, it needs to be in this thread of its own. It will take time (years) to interpret, agree and crystalize your goal. Most of us are retired grumpy old men and time is all we got or so we hope. (-'
Theremin success is based upon traveling through the maze of 10,000 reasons why a theremin will not cooperate, that is no exaggeration. For you that will be 10,000 x 13.
My first thought if you want to trigger a single event to turn on a pre-recorded sound sequence use passive infra-red detection, 13 theremins will require 13 people to retune them all day long whether it makes sound or not, passive infra-red is more stable. Theremins outdoors are extremely unstable due to environment changes, temperature (sun), humidity, wind, etc.
What is the distance for response and how close together will they be in your scaled down art?
When you hear a Master play the theremin... it is truly a miracle.
Christopher