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2003, Swimming in the Air - Electronic Musician Olivia Mattis February 26,
The theremin is currently enjoying a resurgence in popularity. However, it is one of the most difficult
instruments to play, let alone master. To play it well requires dedication, practice, and patience.
Besides
being one of the first electronic musical instruments invented, the theremin was the first instrument in the world that could
be played without being touched. Russian inventor Leon (or Lev) Theremin created his namesake instrument in 1919, at the age
of 23. By 1928, the inventor had relocated to the United States, where he continued improving the theremin, developed new
instruments, and trained a generation of thereminists until his forced return to the Soviet Union in
1937.
Lydia Kavina was Theremin's last protégé and is now the world's leading theremin virtuoso. Kavina
began studying the theremin at the tender age of nine, after Theremin recognized her remarkable musical
ability.
Born in 1967, she began performing publicly at age 14. She studied composition at the Tchaikovsky
State Conservatory in Moscow, where she finished her postgraduate degree in 1997. She has been on the lecture staff of the
Glinka Museum and is now affiliated with the Theremin Center, both located in Moscow. Recently, she was the featured soloist
on Howard Shore's soundtracks for Ed Wood and eXistenZ, and has performed in productions of Alice (Hamburg) and Black Rider
(Cologne), directed by Robert Wilson with music by Tom Waits. Kavina herself has composed over a dozen pieces for the
theremin with ensembles, orchestras, and electronics, and continues to concertize internationally.
I conducted
this conversation with Kavina by e-mail over a period of several weeks. A few of the questions were contributed by members of
Levnet, an online group of theremin enthusiasts. The topics and techniques Kavina discusses will give beginning theremin
players the tools they need to confidently step up to the antenna.
From emusician.com
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