| Just
a few years after the invention of the vacuum tube, Leon
Theremin invented one of the world's first and most unique
electronic musical instruments: the aetherphone, better known
as the Theremin.
Lev Sergeyevich Termen
was born in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1896. Like many
inventors, he was interested in both music and physics. After
enrolling at the University of Petrograd, he concentrated his
studies in the field of electrical engineering. There, he was
repairing a radio when he conceived the idea of an essentially
electronic musical instrument: not just an acoustic instrument
embellished or amplified electronically, but an instrument
that would produce purely electronic music.
In 1918, Theremin built
the prototype of his "aetherphone." It was fairly
simple in shape: a wooden box, mounted on four legs, with a
straight antenna rising up from its top and a P-shaped loop
antenna extending horizontally from its left side. Inside the
box, the antennas were connected to very high frequency
oscillators made with vacuum tubes. On the front of the box
were control switches.
The key to the
aetherphone's sound is the principle of heterodyning: when two
signals of close but different frequency are mixed, a new
signal results whose frequency is equal to the difference of
the two original signals. Alone, the signals produced by the
Theremin's oscillators are too high-pitched for the human ear
to hear; but when those signals combine, the resulting signal
can be heard, and more importantly can be varied by the
position of the "musician" standing between the two
antennas. Specifically, the player waves his or her hands near
the straight antenna to control pitch (the range is about 2
1/2 octaves on either side of middle C), and near the looped
antenna to control volume (bringing the hand within an inch of
the antenna cuts off the sound completely).
Theremin's invention is
still the only musical instrument which is played without any
physical contact. The sound it can produce runs from a drone
to a whine, but is always somewhat other-worldly. For this
reason, although Theremin himself and others have composed
complex musical works in the classical style for the Theremin
(as the device is better known), it is best recognized for its
prominence in the soundtrack to various early Hollywood sci-fi
movies, like "The Day the Earth Stood Still."
Theremin first
demonstrated his instrument to a group of Russian physicists
in 1920; in 1922, he performed for Lenin. Five years later, he
toured Europe, playing symphonies he had composed "for
aetherphone and orchestra" to standing-room-only
audiences. In December of 1927, he came to New York, where he
played for Rachmaninoff and Toscanini, among others.
Capitalizing on his success, Theremin set up a lab and music
studio in New York. In 1928, he played with the New York
Philharmonic, and he also earned a US patent (#1,661,058). The
next year, RCA began to manufacture and market the "thereminvox"
under license.
The instrument was not a
commercial success, partly because it is very difficult to
play with any degree of subtlety, and partly because the Great
Depression meant that few could afford such luxuries. However,
Theremin did find a virtuoso in his fellow Russian émigré
Clara Rockmore: no one has ever been able to match the
"aerial fingering" with which she could coax
astonishingly precise and subtle sounds from the instrument.
For ten years Theremin
worked in New York. With the help of Clara Rockmore, he
developed what would today be called "performance
art," featuring stages which automatically reacted to
dancers' movements with varied patterns of sound and light.
Then, in 1938, Theremin was kidnapped by the KGB and taken
back to Russia. Forced to abandon his music, he spent a year
in prison, and later developed listening devices for the
Soviet secret police. Meanwhile, RCA scrapped its stock of
Theremins in order to provide raw materials to the US war
effort.
In 1991, at the age of
95, Theremin returned to the US, where he was reunited with
Clara Rockmore and gave a number of concerts. He then went
back to Russia, and died in Moscow two years later.
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