I placed a down payment on a theremin yesterday. I have no idea what it will end up looking like, but this is for the best, I feel. For this particular instrument (which I have never played before BTW), not knowing how it will turn out creates a certain excitement I could never attain by simply ordering online or through a music catalog. This was only made possible by hiring an otaku to do the job. Kasama-san is a nice guy, a most skilled bassist, Taro’s business partner (they sell antique condensers, specialized mic shields, and other maniac music shit), and one of the most functional denki-otakus I have ever met.
When I found a loose circuit board connection to input RCA connector jacks inside my 500 watt amp, I used what tricks I could to keep it working temporarily. Unwilling to be without decent sound in my car for even a short time, I never even considered having it fixed at a professional shop since they generally take forever just to tell you (approximately) how badly you will get raped for repairs. I looked around for a decent replacement instead, but couldn’t find a good deal before the connection got a lot worse and basically made my amp unuseable. So I turned to Kasama-san, who I knew at the time as a tinkerer of guitar amps, and he replaced the part I needed on the board for a pittance – so I tipped him well. The skills he possesses are very special in our modern world of cheap throwaway electronics. Like some of the engineers at work, he can read the circuits on a PCB like a roadmap, and tell you where you can find shortcuts, bypasses, and hidden paths, among other things. This is a very valuable skill.
Anyways. Theremin of unknown specification and design will be mine in a couple of weeks, and I take great comfort in knowing that the creator has spent countless hours worrying about each subcomponent, optimizing it as a whole system, and tweaking it to perfection with the cold twisted love of electronica.
Recent Comments
- Sandmich on All hail Nexus 7
- Sandmich on Salmon Lays
- Debiddo on Mina pimping new Jordans @Mag Shop, Maha Sarakham
- Kevin Kim on Accidentally turned my Tilapia into a Grouper
- meimei on Max was shocked to discover that his sister was actually a dinosaur.
- bighominid on Max was shocked to discover that his sister was actually a dinosaur.
- meimei on Salmon Lays
- Justin on Moar 24
- Kevin Kim on Moar 24
- Kevin Kim on Moar 24
Archives by Category
- Around Mahasarakham (51)
- Cars (104)
- Chillin' (286)
- Exploits (182)
- Food (123)
- Gaming (24)
- Japanese American Internment (9)
- Japanese Society/Culture (167)
- Moblog (archives) (384)
- Moblogging (Android) (38)
- Music (58)
- New Word (13)
- Oh, baby! (456)
- Old Blog Entries (archives) (235)
- Our New Thai House (30)
- Our Wedding in Thailand (52)
- Photos (688)
- School Daze (1)
- School of Rice (archives) (48)
- Site News (139)
- Society & Culture (153)
- Thai Society/Culture (324)
- Toys & Tech (172)
- Typhoon Tokage (10)
- Uncategorized (42)
- Updated Sayings for Generation Facebook (5)
- Videos (375)
- Web (914)
- What Max Is Drawing (1)
- Work (169)
- Yoda the Kitten (12)
- Zatoichi (13)
Archives by Month
- May 2013 (18)
- April 2013 (15)
- March 2013 (16)
- February 2013 (10)
- January 2013 (13)
- December 2012 (18)
- November 2012 (12)
- October 2012 (18)
- September 2012 (10)
- August 2012 (12)
- July 2012 (14)
- June 2012 (19)
- May 2012 (18)
- April 2012 (8)
- March 2012 (13)
- February 2012 (11)
- January 2012 (14)
- December 2011 (23)
- November 2011 (9)
- October 2011 (18)
- September 2011 (19)
- August 2011 (22)
- July 2011 (23)
- June 2011 (26)
- May 2011 (16)
- April 2011 (17)
- March 2011 (37)
- February 2011 (19)
- January 2011 (25)
- December 2010 (40)
- November 2010 (34)
- October 2010 (25)
- September 2010 (20)
- August 2010 (20)
- July 2010 (27)
- June 2010 (24)
- May 2010 (14)
- April 2010 (26)
- March 2010 (34)
- February 2010 (26)
- January 2010 (34)
- December 2009 (40)
- November 2009 (33)
- October 2009 (38)
- September 2009 (39)
- August 2009 (33)
- July 2009 (33)
- June 2009 (25)
- May 2009 (35)
- April 2009 (42)
- March 2009 (31)
- February 2009 (32)
- January 2009 (41)
- December 2008 (32)
- November 2008 (29)
- October 2008 (35)
- September 2008 (48)
- August 2008 (37)
- July 2008 (27)
- June 2008 (34)
- May 2008 (21)
- April 2008 (45)
- March 2008 (21)
- February 2008 (37)
- January 2008 (32)
- December 2007 (32)
- November 2007 (29)
- October 2007 (26)
- September 2007 (24)
- August 2007 (29)
- July 2007 (30)
- June 2007 (27)
- May 2007 (25)
- April 2007 (29)
- March 2007 (32)
- February 2007 (15)
- January 2007 (25)
- December 2006 (20)
- November 2006 (26)
- October 2006 (24)
- September 2006 (74)
- August 2006 (56)
- July 2006 (47)
- June 2006 (45)
- May 2006 (36)
- April 2006 (37)
- March 2006 (75)
- February 2006 (29)
- January 2006 (51)
- December 2005 (48)
- November 2005 (45)
- October 2005 (46)
- September 2005 (56)
- August 2005 (46)
- July 2005 (41)
- June 2005 (47)
- May 2005 (36)
- April 2005 (54)
- March 2005 (40)
- February 2005 (44)
- January 2005 (41)
- December 2004 (29)
- November 2004 (49)
- October 2004 (57)
- September 2004 (55)
- August 2004 (50)
- July 2004 (69)
- June 2004 (42)
- May 2004 (52)
- April 2004 (44)
- March 2004 (36)
- February 2004 (29)
- January 2004 (17)
- December 2003 (24)
- November 2003 (25)
- October 2003 (48)
- September 2003 (15)
- August 2003 (5)
- July 2003 (10)
- June 2003 (5)
- May 2003 (11)
- April 2003 (6)
It’s about time you got that thing fixed. The crackle pop it spat out on occasion was startling in an unpleasant way.
Portishead brings back memories of riding in my brother’s car – I’m not at all surprised you’re a fan.
Sweet – enjoy the theremin, then stop by Thereminworld’s forums to tell us how you like it!
Jason, I’m poring over your site right now… Well done! I’ll probably be ordering some of the recommended music through your links later this week.