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Leon Theremin

Lev Sergeyevich Termen (Russian: Лев Сергеевич Термен, IPA: [ˈlʲef sʲɪrˈɡʲejɪvʲɪtɕ tʲɪrˈmʲen]; 27 August [O.S. 15 August] 1896 – 3 November 1993), better known as Leon Theremin, was a Russian inventor, most famous for his invention of the theremin, one of the first electronic musical instruments and the first to be mass-produced. He also worked on early television research. His secret listening device, "The Thing", hung for seven years in plain view in the United States ambassador's Moscow office and enabled Soviet agents to eavesdrop on secret conversations.

Leon Theremin
Lev Termen demonstrating the theremin, December 1927
Born
Lev Sergeyevich Termen

27 August [O.S. 15 August] 1896
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Died3 November 1993(1993-11-03) (aged 97)
Moscow, Russia
Occupation(s)Engineer, physicist
Known forTheremin, The Thing

Early life edit

Leon Theremin was born in Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire in 1896. His father was Sergei Emilievich Theremin, of French Huguenot descent. His mother was Yevgenia Antonova Orzhinskaya[1] and of German ancestry.[2] He had a sister named Helena.[3]

In the seventh class of his high school before an audience of students and parents he demonstrated various optical effects using electricity.[4]

By the age of 17 he was in his last year of high school, had his own laboratory at home for experimenting with high-frequency circuits, optics and magnetic fields. His cousin, Kirill Fedorovich Nesturkh, then a young physicist, invited him to attend the defense of the dissertation of Abram Fedorovich Ioffe. Physics lecturer Vladimir Konstantinovich Lebedinskiy had explained to Theremin the dispute over Ioffe's work on the electron. On 9 May 1913 Theremin and his cousin attended Ioffe's dissertation defense. Ioffe's subject was on the elementary photoelectric effect, the magnetic field of cathode rays and related investigations. In 1917 Theremin wrote that Ioffe talked of electrons, the photoelectric effect and magnetic fields as parts of an objective reality that surrounds us every day, unlike others that talked more of somewhat abstract formulae and symbols. Theremin wrote that he found this explanation revelatory and that it fit a scientific – not abstract – view of the world, different scales of magnitude, and matter.[3] From then on Theremin endeavoured to study the microcosm, in the same way he had studied the macrocosm with his hand-built telescope.[4] Later, Kyrill introduced Theremin to Ioffe as a young experimenter and physicist, and future student of the university.

Theremin recalled that while still in his last year of school, he had built a million-volt Tesla coil and noticed a strong glow associated with his attempts to ionise the air. He then wished to further investigate the effects using university resources. A chance meeting with Abram Fedorovich Ioffe led to a recommendation to see Karl Karlovich Baumgart, who was in charge of the physics laboratory equipment. Karl then reserved a room and equipment for Theremin's experiments. Abram Fedorovich suggested Theremin also look at methods of creating gas fluorescence under different conditions and of examining the resulting light's spectra. However, during these investigations Theremin was called up for World War I military service.[5]

World War I and Russian Civil War edit

Although only in his second academic year, the deanery of the Faculty of Physics and Astronomy recommended that Theremin go to the Nikolayevska Military Engineering School in Petrograd (previously Saint Petersburg), which usually only accepted students in their fourth year. Theremin recalled that Ioffe reassured him that the war would not last long and that military experience would be useful for scientific applications.[6]

Beginning his military service in 1916, Theremin finished the Military Engineering School in six months, progressed through the Graduate Electronic School for Officers, and attained the military radio-engineer diploma in the same year.[citation needed] In the course of the next three and a half years he oversaw the construction of a radio station in Saratov to connect the Volga area with Moscow, graduated from Petrograd University, became deputy leader of the new Military Radiotechnical Laboratory in Moscow, and finished as the broadcast supervisor of the radio transmitter at Tsarskoye Selo near Petrograd (then renamed Detskoye Selo).[6]

During the Russian Civil War, in October 1919 White Army commander Nikolai Nikolayevich Yudenich advanced on Petrograd from the side of Detskoye Selo, apparently intending to capture the radio station to announce a victory over the Bolsheviks. Theremin and others evacuated the station, sending equipment east on rail cars. Theremin then detonated explosives to destroy the 120-meter-high antennae mast before traveling to Petrograd to set up an international listening station. There he also trained radio specialists but reported difficulties obtaining food and working with foreign experts whom he described as narrow-minded pessimists.[7]

Theremin recalled that on an evening when his hopes of overcoming these obstructing experts reached a low ebb, Abram Fedorovich Ioffe telephoned him.[8] Ioffe asked Theremin to come to his newly founded Physical Technical Institute in Petrograd, and the next day he invited him to start work at developing measuring methods for high-frequency electrical oscillations.[8]

Under Ioffe edit

The day after Ioffe's invitation, Theremin started at the institute. He worked in diverse fields: applying the Laue effect to the new field of X-ray analysis of crystals; using hypnosis to improve measurement-reading accuracy; working with Ivan Pavlov's laboratory; and using gas-filled lamps as measuring devices.[9] He built a high-frequency oscillator to measure the dielectric constant of gases with high precision; Ioffe then urged him to look for other applications using this method, and shortly made the first motion detector for use as a "radio watchman".[note 1][10][11]

While adapting the dielectric device by adding circuitry to generate an audio tone, Theremin noticed that the pitch changed when his hand moved around.[12] In October 1920[13] he first demonstrated this to Ioffe who called in other professors and students to hear.[14] Theremin recalled trying to find the notes for tunes he remembered from when he played the cello, such as The Swan, by Saint-Saëns.[10][12] By November 1920, Theremin had given his first public concert with the instrument, now modified with a horizontal volume antenna replacing the earlier foot-operated volume control.[14][15] He named it the etherphone,[15] but it was known in the Soviet Union as the Russian: Терменвокс, romanizedTermenvox or Termenvoks, in Germany as the Thereminvox[16] and later, in the USA, as the theremin.

On 24 May 1924 Theremin married 20-year-old Katia (Yekaterina Pavlovna) Konstantinova, and they lived together in his parents' apartment on Marat street.[17]

In 1925 Theremin went to Germany to sell both the radio watchman and Termenvox patents to the German firm Goldberg and Sons. According to Glinsky, this was the Soviet's "decoy for capitalists" to obtain both Western profits from sales and technical knowledge.[18]

During this time Theremin was also working on a wireless television with 16 scan lines in 1925, improving to 32 scan lines and then 64 using interlacing in 1926, and he demonstrated moving, if blurry, images on 7 June 1927.[18] His device was the first functioning television apparatus in Russia.[19]

United States edit

 
Clara Rockmore and Leon Theremin

After being sent on a lengthy tour of Europe starting 1927 – including London, Paris and towns in Germany[14][20] – during which he demonstrated his invention to full audiences, Theremin went to the United States, arriving on 30 December 1927 with his first wife Katia.[21] He performed the theremin with the New York Philharmonic in 1928. He patented his invention in the United States in 1928[22][23] and subsequently granted commercial production rights to RCA.

Theremin set up a laboratory in New York in the 1930s, where he further refined the theremin and experimented with other inventions and new electronic musical instruments. These included the Rhythmicon, commissioned by the composer Henry Cowell.

In 1930, ten thereminists performed on stage at Carnegie Hall. Two years later, Theremin conducted the first-ever electronic orchestra, featuring the theremin and other electronic instruments including a "fingerboard" theremin which resembled a cello in use (Theremin was a cellist[24]).

In 1931, he worked with composer Henry Cowell to build an instrument called the rhythmicon. They were lucky to have gotten it to market as quickly as they did as brothers Otto and Benjamin Miessner had almost completed a similar instrument with the same name.[25]

Theremin's mentors during this time were some of society's foremost scientists, composers, and musical theorists, including composer Joseph Schillinger and physicist (and amateur violinist) Albert Einstein.[clarification needed]

At this time, Theremin worked closely with fellow Soviet émigré and theremin virtuoso Clara Rockmore (née Reisenberg). Theremin had several times proposed to her, but she chose to marry attorney Robert Rockmore, and thereafter used his name professionally.[26]

The U.S. Federal Bureau of Prisons hired Theremin to build a metal detector for Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary.[27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37][38]

Theremin was interested in a role for the theremin in dance music. He developed performance locations that could automatically react to dancers' movements with varied patterns of sound and light.

The Soviet consulate had apparently demanded he divorce Katia. Afterwards, while working with the American Negro Ballet Company, the inventor married a young African-American prima ballerina Lavinia Williams.[21] Their marriage caused shock and disapproval in his social circles, but the ostracized couple remained together.[39]

Return to the Soviet Union edit

Theremin abruptly returned to the Soviet Union in 1938. At the time, the reasons for his return were unclear; some claimed that he was homesick, while others believed that he had been kidnapped by Soviet officials. Beryl Campbell, one of Theremin's dancers, said his wife Lavinia "called to say that he had been kidnapped from his studio" and that "some Russians had come in" and that she felt that he was going to be spirited out of the country.[40]

Many years later, it was revealed that Theremin had returned to his native land due to tax and financial difficulties in the United States.[41] However, Theremin himself once told Bulat Galeyev that he decided to leave himself because he was anxious about the approaching war.[2] Shortly after he returned he was imprisoned in the Butyrka prison and later sent to work in the Kolyma gold mines. Although rumors of his execution were widely circulated and published, Theremin was put to work in a sharashka (a secret laboratory in the Gulag camp system), together with Andrei Tupolev, Sergei Korolev and other well-known scientists and engineers.[21] The Soviet Union rehabilitated him in 1956.

Espionage edit

 
"The Thing"

During his work at the sharashka, where he was put in charge of other workers, Theremin created the Buran eavesdropping system. A precursor to the modern laser microphone, it worked by using a low-power infrared beam from a distance to detect sound vibrations in glass windows.[2][42] Lavrentiy Beria, the head of the secret police organization NKVD (the predecessor of the KGB), used the Buran device to spy on the British, French and US embassies in Moscow.[42] According to Galeyev, Beria also spied on Stalin; Theremin kept some of the tapes in his flat. In 1947, Theremin was awarded the Stalin prize for inventing this advance in Soviet espionage technology.

Theremin invented another listening device called The Thing, hidden in a replica of the Great Seal of the United States carved in wood. In 1945, Soviet school children presented the concealed bug to the U.S. Ambassador as a "gesture of friendship" to the USSR's World War II ally. It hung in the ambassador’s residential office in Moscow and intercepted confidential conversations there during the first seven years of the Cold War, until it was accidentally discovered in 1952.[43][44][45]

Later life edit

After his release from the sharashka in 1947, Theremin volunteered to remain working with the KGB until 1966.[2] By 1947 Theremin had remarried, to Maria Guschina, his third wife, and they had two children: Lena and Natalia.[21]

Theremin worked at the Moscow Conservatory of Music[46] for 10 years where he taught, and built theremins, electronic cellos and some terpsitones (another invention of Theremin).[40] There he was discovered by Harold Schonberg, the chief music critic of The New York Times, who was visiting the Conservatory. But when an article by Schonberg appeared mentioning Theremin,[47] the Conservatory's Managing Director declared that "electricity is not good for music; electricity is to be used for electrocution" and had his instruments removed from the Conservatory.[21] Further electronic music projects were banned, and Theremin was summarily dismissed.[48]

In the 1970s, Leon Theremin was a Professor of Physics at Moscow State University (Department of Acoustics) developing his inventions and supervising graduate students.

After 51 years in the Soviet Union Theremin started travelling, first visiting France in June 1989[2] and then the United States in 1991, each time accompanied by his daughter Natalia. Theremin was brought to New York by filmmaker Steven M. Martin where he was reunited with Clara Rockmore. He also made a demonstration concert at the Royal Conservatory of The Hague in early 1993[2] before dying in Moscow on Wednesday 3 November 1993 at the age of 97.[49][50][51][52][53][54]

Family edit

  • Katia (Ekaterina Pavlovna) Konstantinova, first spouse
  • Lavinia Williams, second spouse (no children)
  • Maria Gushina, third spouse
  • Elena "Lena" Theremin - daughter;
  • Natalia Theremin - daughter;
  • Maria "Masha" Alekseyevna Theremin - granddaughter;
  • Olga Theremin - granddaughter;
  • Peter Theremin - great-grandson.

Media edit

The feature-length documentary film Theremin: An Electronic Odyssey was released in 1993.

His life story and his Great Seal bug invention were featured in a 2012 episode of the Dark Matters: Twisted But True.

In 2000, University of Illinois Press published Theremin: Ether Music and Espionage by Albert Glinsky, with a foreword by Robert Moog.

In 2014, Canadian writer Sean Michaels published the novel Us Conductors, which was inspired by the relationship between Leon Theremin and Clara Rockmore. The novel won the 2014 Scotiabank Giller Prize.

In 2022, French writer Emmanuel Villin published the novel La Fugue Thérémine (éditions Asphalte), which looks back on the life of Leon Theremin.

Inventions edit

  • Theremin (1920)
  • Burglar alarm, or "Signalling Apparatus" which used the Theremin effect (1920s).
  • Electromechanical televisionNipkow disk with mirrors instead of slots (ca. 1925).
  • Terpsitone – platform that converts dance movements into tones (1932).
  • Theremin cello – an electronic cello with no strings and no bow, using a plastic fingerboard, a handle for volume and two knobs for sound shaping (ca. 1930).[55][56][57][58]
  • Keyboard theremin (ca. 1930), a small keyboard "with hornlike tones".[59]
  • Rhythmicon – world's first drum machine (1931).
  • The Buran eavesdropping device (1947 or earlier).
  • The Great Seal bug, also known as "The Thing" – one of the first passive covert listening devices; first used by the USSR for spying (1945 or earlier). It is considered a predecessor of RFID technology.[60]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Theremin recalled he made the dielectric device first followed by the radio alarm, although Glinsky (p. 23) writes Theremin made the alarm first and then the dielectric device.

References edit

  1. ^ Albert Glinsky (2000). Theremin: Ether Music and Espionage. University of Illinois Press. p. 10. ISBN 9780252025822. Retrieved 2013-12-28. theremin family huguenot.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Bulat M. Galeyev, LMJ 6.
  3. ^ a b . Erinnerungen an A. F. Joffe (in German). Archived from the original on 2009-05-11. Retrieved 2009-04-25.
  4. ^ a b L. S. Termen (1970). . Erinnerungen an A. F. Joffe (in German). Archived from the original on 2009-05-11. Retrieved 2009-04-25.
  5. ^ L. S. Termen (1970). . Erinnerungen an A. F. Joffe (in German). Archived from the original on 2009-05-11. Retrieved 2009-03-21.
  6. ^ a b L. S. Termen (1970). . Erinnerungen an A. F. Joffe (in German). Archived from the original on 2009-05-11. Retrieved 2009-04-25.
  7. ^ L. S. Termen (1970). . Erinnerungen an A. F. Joffe (in German). Archived from the original on 2009-05-11. Retrieved 2009-04-25.
  8. ^ a b L. S. Termen (1970). . Erinnerungen an A. F. Joffe (in German). Archived from the original on 2009-05-11. Retrieved 2009-04-25.
  9. ^ L. S. Termen (1970). . Erinnerungen an A. F. Joffe (in German). Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2009-05-10.
  10. ^ a b L. S. Termen (1970). . Erinnerungen an A. F. Joffe (in German). Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2009-05-10.
  11. ^ Glinsky p. 41, "patent ... radio watchman and the Termenvox ... By December 8, 1924, Len had two German Empire patent applications pending".
  12. ^ a b Glinsky p. 24.
  13. ^ Glinsky p. 26; but Theremin in 1983 recalled it was September.
  14. ^ a b c Leon Theremin – a short memoir Lev Termen, 1983-01-12.
  15. ^ a b Glinsky p. 26.
  16. ^ Glinsky p. 53,
  17. ^ Glinsky p. 36.
  18. ^ a b Glinsky pp. 43–44.
  19. ^ Glinsky pp. 45.
  20. ^ Glinsky p. 340.
  21. ^ a b c d e Mattis 1989
  22. ^ Glinsky p. 346.
  23. ^ U.S. patent 1,661,058.
  24. ^ "Good Vibrations: The Story of the Theremin - BBC Radio 4". BBC.
  25. ^ . Oxford Music Online. Archived from the original on 2017-08-01.
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2011-05-18.
  27. ^ Fischer, Benjamin B. "Leon Theremin – CIA nemesis" (PDF).
  28. ^ Michaels, Sean (22 August 2015). "The invisible instrument: the theremin". The Guardian.
  29. ^ "Obituary: Leon Theremin". Independent.co.uk. 24 November 1993.
  30. ^ Howe, Brian. "The theremin's story is stranger than fiction".
  31. ^ "From Soviet Russia to the Tappan Zee Bridge, A Short History of the E-ZPass".
  32. ^ "SDR Deposit of the Week: Oral history interview with John Chowning". Stanford Libraries.
  33. ^ "INART 55 The Theremin". www.personal.psu.edu.
  34. ^ "Book review: "Us Conductors" by Sean Michaels".
  35. ^ Media, Erie (1 June 2015). "Theremin's life basis for Giller prize-winning book".
  36. ^ "Building a Low-Cost Theremin - EE Times". EETimes.
  37. ^ "100 Projects in 100 Days - PSoC 4 Pioneer Kit: Project#16 - Proximity Theremin". 6 November 2017. from the original on 6 November 2017.
  38. ^ "From Soviet Russia to the Tappan Zee Bridge, A Short History of the E-ZPass". WNYC. 29 June 2017. from the original on 29 June 2017.
  39. ^ Glinsky p. 177.
  40. ^ a b Theremin: An Electronic Odyssey, written, directed and produced by Steven M. Martin. Orion/MGM, 1994: 26mins Beryl Campbell reports Lavinia's call; 50mins Lydia Kavina reports Stalin's award
  41. ^ Glinsky.
  42. ^ a b Glinsky p. 261.
  43. ^ George F. Kennan, Memoirs, 1950–1963, Volume II (Little, Brown & Co., 1972), pp. 155, 156.
  44. ^ Harford, Tim (21 August 2019). "The Cold War spy technology which we all use". BBC News. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  45. ^ "The Thing Great Seal Bug". Crypto Museum. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  46. ^ Glinsky p. 341, "where Lev Sergeyevich had constructed musical instruments"
  47. ^ Schonberg, Harold C. (April 26, 1967). "Music: Leon Theremin; Inventor of Instrument Bearing His Name Is Interviewed in the Soviet Union" (non-free access). The New York Times. p. 40. Retrieved 2009-08-16. Remember Leon Theremin, who used to play the theremin and was such a hit in the United States about 35 years back?
  48. ^ Glinsky p. 310.
  49. ^ Jolly, James (January 1994). "Obituaries". Gramophone Magazine. 71 (848). Middlesex, UK: General Gramophone Publications Limited: 17. ISSN 0017-310X.
  50. ^ Grimes, William (November 9, 1993). "Leon Theremin, Musical Inventor, Is Dead at 97". The New York Times. Retrieved August 9, 2019 – via NYTimes.com.
  51. ^ "Paul Tanner dies at 95; trombonist with Glenn Miller Orchestra". Los Angeles Times. February 6, 2013. Retrieved August 9, 2019.
  52. ^ "Leon Theremin | Russian scientist". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved August 9, 2019.
  53. ^ "The theremin makes a triumphant return". Houston Chronicle. December 3, 2014. Retrieved August 9, 2019.
  54. ^ Aiden, Erez; Michel, Jean-Baptiste (August 9, 2014). Uncharted: Big Data as a Lens on Human Culture. Penguin. ISBN 9781594632907. Retrieved August 9, 2019 – via Google Books.
  55. ^ Peter Pringle. "The Rebirth of the Theremin Cello". Retrieved 2009-09-20.
  56. ^ "Theremin Cello". oddmusic. Retrieved 2009-09-20.
  57. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : Bryan (publisher and demonstrator) (2007-06-10). Theremin Cello. Seattle: Bryan. Retrieved 2009-09-20. (demonstration playing of a theremincello)
  58. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : Bryan (publisher and player) (2007-03-03). Theremin's cello meditation. Seattle: Bryan. Retrieved 2009-09-20. (slideshow including internal details of a theremincello replica)
  59. ^ "Radio Squeals turned to Music", Popular Science, June 1932, p. 51, available on popsci.com 2011-09-16 at the Wayback Machine
  60. ^ Hacking Exposed Linux: Linux Security Secrets & Solutions (third ed.). McGraw-Hill Osborne Media. 2008. p. 298. ISBN 978-0-07-226257-5.

Sources edit

  • Galeyev, Bulat M.; Translated by Vladimir Chudnovsky (1996). "Light and Shadows of a Great Life: In Commemoration of the One-Hundredth Anniversary of the Birth of Leon Theremin, Pioneer of Electronic Art". Leonardo Music Journal. 6. Retrieved 2007-11-22. Linked from
  • Lobanova, Marina (1999). "Lew Termen: Erfinder, Tschekist, Spion". Neue Zeitschrift für Musik (in German). 4: 50–53.
  • Glinsky, Albert (2000). Theremin: Ether Music and Espionage. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-02582-2.
  • Mattis, Olivia (1989-06-16). "An Interview with Leon Theremin / Olivia Mattis and Leon Theremin in Bourges, France". Translated by Nina Boguslawsky; Alejandro Tkaczevski. Retrieved 2007-11-21. copied here Theremin Vox - An Interview with Leon Theremin
  • Termen, Lew. (in German). Website of the Institute of Media Archeology, Austria. Archived from the original on 2009-05-11. Retrieved 2009-04-25. Sections translated by Felix Eder from the Russian originals in: Жузе, В. П., ed. (1973). Воспоминания об А. Ф. Иоффе [Memories of A.F. Joffe]. Nauka (Leningrad).
  • Wright, Peter (1987). Spycatcher: The Candid Autobiography of a Senior Intelligence Officer. New York: Viking. ISBN 0-670-82055-5.

External links edit

  • (selected demonstrations of Theremin sensors and laser bugging.) Retrieved 2009-09-11
  • Theremin Centre, Moscow, holds Lev Sergeivitch Termen archives (Russian only)

leon, theremin, sergeyevich, termen, russian, Лев, Сергеевич, Термен, ˈlʲef, sʲɪrˈɡʲejɪvʲɪtɕ, tʲɪrˈmʲen, august, august, 1896, november, 1993, better, known, russian, inventor, most, famous, invention, theremin, first, electronic, musical, instruments, first, . Lev Sergeyevich Termen Russian Lev Sergeevich Termen IPA ˈlʲef sʲɪrˈɡʲejɪvʲɪtɕ tʲɪrˈmʲen 27 August O S 15 August 1896 3 November 1993 better known as Leon Theremin was a Russian inventor most famous for his invention of the theremin one of the first electronic musical instruments and the first to be mass produced He also worked on early television research His secret listening device The Thing hung for seven years in plain view in the United States ambassador s Moscow office and enabled Soviet agents to eavesdrop on secret conversations Leon ThereminLev Termen demonstrating the theremin December 1927BornLev Sergeyevich Termen27 August O S 15 August 1896Saint Petersburg Russian EmpireDied3 November 1993 1993 11 03 aged 97 Moscow RussiaOccupation s Engineer physicistKnown forTheremin The Thing Contents 1 Early life 2 World War I and Russian Civil War 3 Under Ioffe 4 United States 5 Return to the Soviet Union 6 Espionage 7 Later life 8 Family 9 Media 10 Inventions 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Sources 15 External linksEarly life editLeon Theremin was born in Saint Petersburg Russian Empire in 1896 His father was Sergei Emilievich Theremin of French Huguenot descent His mother was Yevgenia Antonova Orzhinskaya 1 and of German ancestry 2 He had a sister named Helena 3 In the seventh class of his high school before an audience of students and parents he demonstrated various optical effects using electricity 4 By the age of 17 he was in his last year of high school had his own laboratory at home for experimenting with high frequency circuits optics and magnetic fields His cousin Kirill Fedorovich Nesturkh then a young physicist invited him to attend the defense of the dissertation of Abram Fedorovich Ioffe Physics lecturer Vladimir Konstantinovich Lebedinskiy had explained to Theremin the dispute over Ioffe s work on the electron On 9 May 1913 Theremin and his cousin attended Ioffe s dissertation defense Ioffe s subject was on the elementary photoelectric effect the magnetic field of cathode rays and related investigations In 1917 Theremin wrote that Ioffe talked of electrons the photoelectric effect and magnetic fields as parts of an objective reality that surrounds us every day unlike others that talked more of somewhat abstract formulae and symbols Theremin wrote that he found this explanation revelatory and that it fit a scientific not abstract view of the world different scales of magnitude and matter 3 From then on Theremin endeavoured to study the microcosm in the same way he had studied the macrocosm with his hand built telescope 4 Later Kyrill introduced Theremin to Ioffe as a young experimenter and physicist and future student of the university Theremin recalled that while still in his last year of school he had built a million volt Tesla coil and noticed a strong glow associated with his attempts to ionise the air He then wished to further investigate the effects using university resources A chance meeting with Abram Fedorovich Ioffe led to a recommendation to see Karl Karlovich Baumgart who was in charge of the physics laboratory equipment Karl then reserved a room and equipment for Theremin s experiments Abram Fedorovich suggested Theremin also look at methods of creating gas fluorescence under different conditions and of examining the resulting light s spectra However during these investigations Theremin was called up for World War I military service 5 World War I and Russian Civil War editAlthough only in his second academic year the deanery of the Faculty of Physics and Astronomy recommended that Theremin go to the Nikolayevska Military Engineering School in Petrograd previously Saint Petersburg which usually only accepted students in their fourth year Theremin recalled that Ioffe reassured him that the war would not last long and that military experience would be useful for scientific applications 6 Beginning his military service in 1916 Theremin finished the Military Engineering School in six months progressed through the Graduate Electronic School for Officers and attained the military radio engineer diploma in the same year citation needed In the course of the next three and a half years he oversaw the construction of a radio station in Saratov to connect the Volga area with Moscow graduated from Petrograd University became deputy leader of the new Military Radiotechnical Laboratory in Moscow and finished as the broadcast supervisor of the radio transmitter at Tsarskoye Selo near Petrograd then renamed Detskoye Selo 6 During the Russian Civil War in October 1919 White Army commander Nikolai Nikolayevich Yudenich advanced on Petrograd from the side of Detskoye Selo apparently intending to capture the radio station to announce a victory over the Bolsheviks Theremin and others evacuated the station sending equipment east on rail cars Theremin then detonated explosives to destroy the 120 meter high antennae mast before traveling to Petrograd to set up an international listening station There he also trained radio specialists but reported difficulties obtaining food and working with foreign experts whom he described as narrow minded pessimists 7 Theremin recalled that on an evening when his hopes of overcoming these obstructing experts reached a low ebb Abram Fedorovich Ioffe telephoned him 8 Ioffe asked Theremin to come to his newly founded Physical Technical Institute in Petrograd and the next day he invited him to start work at developing measuring methods for high frequency electrical oscillations 8 Under Ioffe editThe day after Ioffe s invitation Theremin started at the institute He worked in diverse fields applying the Laue effect to the new field of X ray analysis of crystals using hypnosis to improve measurement reading accuracy working with Ivan Pavlov s laboratory and using gas filled lamps as measuring devices 9 He built a high frequency oscillator to measure the dielectric constant of gases with high precision Ioffe then urged him to look for other applications using this method and shortly made the first motion detector for use as a radio watchman note 1 10 11 While adapting the dielectric device by adding circuitry to generate an audio tone Theremin noticed that the pitch changed when his hand moved around 12 In October 1920 13 he first demonstrated this to Ioffe who called in other professors and students to hear 14 Theremin recalled trying to find the notes for tunes he remembered from when he played the cello such as The Swan by Saint Saens 10 12 By November 1920 Theremin had given his first public concert with the instrument now modified with a horizontal volume antenna replacing the earlier foot operated volume control 14 15 He named it the etherphone 15 but it was known in the Soviet Union as the Russian Termenvoks romanized Termenvox or Termenvoks in Germany as the Thereminvox 16 and later in the USA as the theremin On 24 May 1924 Theremin married 20 year old Katia Yekaterina Pavlovna Konstantinova and they lived together in his parents apartment on Marat street 17 In 1925 Theremin went to Germany to sell both the radio watchman and Termenvox patents to the German firm Goldberg and Sons According to Glinsky this was the Soviet s decoy for capitalists to obtain both Western profits from sales and technical knowledge 18 During this time Theremin was also working on a wireless television with 16 scan lines in 1925 improving to 32 scan lines and then 64 using interlacing in 1926 and he demonstrated moving if blurry images on 7 June 1927 18 His device was the first functioning television apparatus in Russia 19 United States edit nbsp Clara Rockmore and Leon Theremin After being sent on a lengthy tour of Europe starting 1927 including London Paris and towns in Germany 14 20 during which he demonstrated his invention to full audiences Theremin went to the United States arriving on 30 December 1927 with his first wife Katia 21 He performed the theremin with the New York Philharmonic in 1928 He patented his invention in the United States in 1928 22 23 and subsequently granted commercial production rights to RCA Theremin set up a laboratory in New York in the 1930s where he further refined the theremin and experimented with other inventions and new electronic musical instruments These included the Rhythmicon commissioned by the composer Henry Cowell In 1930 ten thereminists performed on stage at Carnegie Hall Two years later Theremin conducted the first ever electronic orchestra featuring the theremin and other electronic instruments including a fingerboard theremin which resembled a cello in use Theremin was a cellist 24 In 1931 he worked with composer Henry Cowell to build an instrument called the rhythmicon They were lucky to have gotten it to market as quickly as they did as brothers Otto and Benjamin Miessner had almost completed a similar instrument with the same name 25 Theremin s mentors during this time were some of society s foremost scientists composers and musical theorists including composer Joseph Schillinger and physicist and amateur violinist Albert Einstein clarification needed At this time Theremin worked closely with fellow Soviet emigre and theremin virtuoso Clara Rockmore nee Reisenberg Theremin had several times proposed to her but she chose to marry attorney Robert Rockmore and thereafter used his name professionally 26 The U S Federal Bureau of Prisons hired Theremin to build a metal detector for Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 Theremin was interested in a role for the theremin in dance music He developed performance locations that could automatically react to dancers movements with varied patterns of sound and light The Soviet consulate had apparently demanded he divorce Katia Afterwards while working with the American Negro Ballet Company the inventor married a young African American prima ballerina Lavinia Williams 21 Their marriage caused shock and disapproval in his social circles but the ostracized couple remained together 39 Return to the Soviet Union editTheremin abruptly returned to the Soviet Union in 1938 At the time the reasons for his return were unclear some claimed that he was homesick while others believed that he had been kidnapped by Soviet officials Beryl Campbell one of Theremin s dancers said his wife Lavinia called to say that he had been kidnapped from his studio and that some Russians had come in and that she felt that he was going to be spirited out of the country 40 Many years later it was revealed that Theremin had returned to his native land due to tax and financial difficulties in the United States 41 However Theremin himself once told Bulat Galeyev that he decided to leave himself because he was anxious about the approaching war 2 Shortly after he returned he was imprisoned in the Butyrka prison and later sent to work in the Kolyma gold mines Although rumors of his execution were widely circulated and published Theremin was put to work in a sharashka a secret laboratory in the Gulag camp system together with Andrei Tupolev Sergei Korolev and other well known scientists and engineers 21 The Soviet Union rehabilitated him in 1956 Espionage edit nbsp The Thing During his work at the sharashka where he was put in charge of other workers Theremin created the Buran eavesdropping system A precursor to the modern laser microphone it worked by using a low power infrared beam from a distance to detect sound vibrations in glass windows 2 42 Lavrentiy Beria the head of the secret police organization NKVD the predecessor of the KGB used the Buran device to spy on the British French and US embassies in Moscow 42 According to Galeyev Beria also spied on Stalin Theremin kept some of the tapes in his flat In 1947 Theremin was awarded the Stalin prize for inventing this advance in Soviet espionage technology Theremin invented another listening device called The Thing hidden in a replica of the Great Seal of the United States carved in wood In 1945 Soviet school children presented the concealed bug to the U S Ambassador as a gesture of friendship to the USSR s World War II ally It hung in the ambassador s residential office in Moscow and intercepted confidential conversations there during the first seven years of the Cold War until it was accidentally discovered in 1952 43 44 45 Later life editAfter his release from the sharashka in 1947 Theremin volunteered to remain working with the KGB until 1966 2 By 1947 Theremin had remarried to Maria Guschina his third wife and they had two children Lena and Natalia 21 Theremin worked at the Moscow Conservatory of Music 46 for 10 years where he taught and built theremins electronic cellos and some terpsitones another invention of Theremin 40 There he was discovered by Harold Schonberg the chief music critic of The New York Times who was visiting the Conservatory But when an article by Schonberg appeared mentioning Theremin 47 the Conservatory s Managing Director declared that electricity is not good for music electricity is to be used for electrocution and had his instruments removed from the Conservatory 21 Further electronic music projects were banned and Theremin was summarily dismissed 48 In the 1970s Leon Theremin was a Professor of Physics at Moscow State University Department of Acoustics developing his inventions and supervising graduate students After 51 years in the Soviet Union Theremin started travelling first visiting France in June 1989 2 and then the United States in 1991 each time accompanied by his daughter Natalia Theremin was brought to New York by filmmaker Steven M Martin where he was reunited with Clara Rockmore He also made a demonstration concert at the Royal Conservatory of The Hague in early 1993 2 before dying in Moscow on Wednesday 3 November 1993 at the age of 97 49 50 51 52 53 54 Family editKatia Ekaterina Pavlovna Konstantinova first spouse Lavinia Williams second spouse no children Maria Gushina third spouse Elena Lena Theremin daughter Natalia Theremin daughter Maria Masha Alekseyevna Theremin granddaughter Olga Theremin granddaughter Peter Theremin great grandson Media editThe feature length documentary film Theremin An Electronic Odyssey was released in 1993 His life story and his Great Seal bug invention were featured in a 2012 episode of the Dark Matters Twisted But True In 2000 University of Illinois Press published Theremin Ether Music and Espionage by Albert Glinsky with a foreword by Robert Moog In 2014 Canadian writer Sean Michaels published the novel Us Conductors which was inspired by the relationship between Leon Theremin and Clara Rockmore The novel won the 2014 Scotiabank Giller Prize In 2022 French writer Emmanuel Villin published the novel La Fugue Theremine editions Asphalte which looks back on the life of Leon Theremin Inventions editTheremin 1920 Burglar alarm or Signalling Apparatus which used the Theremin effect 1920s Electromechanical television Nipkow disk with mirrors instead of slots ca 1925 Terpsitone platform that converts dance movements into tones 1932 Theremin cello an electronic cello with no strings and no bow using a plastic fingerboard a handle for volume and two knobs for sound shaping ca 1930 55 56 57 58 Keyboard theremin ca 1930 a small keyboard with hornlike tones 59 Rhythmicon world s first drum machine 1931 The Buran eavesdropping device 1947 or earlier The Great Seal bug also known as The Thing one of the first passive covert listening devices first used by the USSR for spying 1945 or earlier It is considered a predecessor of RFID technology 60 See also editSpharophon a Theremin like instrument made by Jorg Mager around 1921 Lee de Forest inventor of the amplifying vacuum tube The Trautonium an early electronic instrument contemporary with the theremin invented by Friedrich Trautwein and later developed by Oskar Sala Maurice Martenot inventor of the Ondes Martenot a keyboard based instrument using the heterodyning method Robert Moog Raymond ScottNotes edit Theremin recalled he made the dielectric device first followed by the radio alarm although Glinsky p 23 writes Theremin made the alarm first and then the dielectric device References edit Albert Glinsky 2000 Theremin Ether Music and Espionage University of Illinois Press p 10 ISBN 9780252025822 Retrieved 2013 12 28 theremin family huguenot a b c d e f Bulat M Galeyev LMJ 6 a b Termens Kindheit Erinnerungen an A F Joffe in German Archived from the original on 2009 05 11 Retrieved 2009 04 25 a b L S Termen 1970 Erstes Treffen mit A F Joffe Erinnerungen an A F Joffe in German Archived from the original on 2009 05 11 Retrieved 2009 04 25 L S Termen 1970 Erste Experimente am Physikalischen Institut bei Joffe Erinnerungen an A F Joffe in German Archived from the original on 2009 05 11 Retrieved 2009 03 21 a b L S Termen 1970 Der erste Weltkrieg Erinnerungen an A F Joffe in German Archived from the original on 2009 05 11 Retrieved 2009 04 25 L S Termen 1970 Die Evakuierung poop Erinnerungen an A F Joffe in German Archived from the original on 2009 05 11 Retrieved 2009 04 25 a b L S Termen 1970 Die Physikalisch Technische Hochschule unter der Leitung von Joffe Erinnerungen an A F Joffe in German Archived from the original on 2009 05 11 Retrieved 2009 04 25 L S Termen 1970 Erhohung der Sinneswahrnehmung durch Hypnose Erinnerungen an A F Joffe in German Archived from the original on 2011 07 06 Retrieved 2009 05 10 a b L S Termen 1970 Die Erfindung des Theremins Erinnerungen an A F Joffe in German Archived from the original on 2011 07 06 Retrieved 2009 05 10 Glinsky p 41 patent radio watchman and the Termenvox By December 8 1924 Len had two German Empire patent applications pending a b Glinsky p 24 Glinsky p 26 but Theremin in 1983 recalled it was September a b c Leon Theremin a short memoir Lev Termen 1983 01 12 a b Glinsky p 26 Glinsky p 53 Glinsky p 36 a b Glinsky pp 43 44 Glinsky pp 45 Glinsky p 340 a b c d e Mattis 1989 Glinsky p 346 U S patent 1 661 058 Good Vibrations The Story of the Theremin BBC Radio 4 BBC Rhythmicon Oxford Music Online Archived from the original on 2017 08 01 The Nadia Reisenberg amp Clara Rockmore Foundation Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2011 05 18 Fischer Benjamin B Leon Theremin CIA nemesis PDF Michaels Sean 22 August 2015 The invisible instrument the theremin The Guardian Obituary Leon Theremin Independent co uk 24 November 1993 Howe Brian The theremin s story is stranger than fiction From Soviet Russia to the Tappan Zee Bridge A Short History of the E ZPass SDR Deposit of the Week Oral history interview with John Chowning Stanford Libraries INART 55 The Theremin www personal psu edu Book review Us Conductors by Sean Michaels Media Erie 1 June 2015 Theremin s life basis for Giller prize winning book Building a Low Cost Theremin EE Times EETimes 100 Projects in 100 Days PSoC 4 Pioneer Kit Project 16 Proximity Theremin 6 November 2017 Archived from the original on 6 November 2017 From Soviet Russia to the Tappan Zee Bridge A Short History of the E ZPass WNYC 29 June 2017 Archived from the original on 29 June 2017 Glinsky p 177 a b Theremin An Electronic Odyssey written directed and produced by Steven M Martin Orion MGM 1994 26mins Beryl Campbell reports Lavinia s call 50mins Lydia Kavina reports Stalin s award Glinsky a b Glinsky p 261 George F Kennan Memoirs 1950 1963 Volume II Little Brown amp Co 1972 pp 155 156 Harford Tim 21 August 2019 The Cold War spy technology which we all use BBC News Retrieved 17 February 2020 The Thing Great Seal Bug Crypto Museum Retrieved 17 February 2020 Glinsky p 341 where Lev Sergeyevich had constructed musical instruments Schonberg Harold C April 26 1967 Music Leon Theremin Inventor of Instrument Bearing His Name Is Interviewed in the Soviet Union non free access The New York Times p 40 Retrieved 2009 08 16 Remember Leon Theremin who used to play the theremin and was such a hit in the United States about 35 years back Glinsky p 310 Jolly James January 1994 Obituaries Gramophone Magazine 71 848 Middlesex UK General Gramophone Publications Limited 17 ISSN 0017 310X Grimes William November 9 1993 Leon Theremin Musical Inventor Is Dead at 97 The New York Times Retrieved August 9 2019 via NYTimes com Paul Tanner dies at 95 trombonist with Glenn Miller Orchestra Los Angeles Times February 6 2013 Retrieved August 9 2019 Leon Theremin Russian scientist Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved August 9 2019 The theremin makes a triumphant return Houston Chronicle December 3 2014 Retrieved August 9 2019 Aiden Erez Michel Jean Baptiste August 9 2014 Uncharted Big Data as a Lens on Human Culture Penguin ISBN 9781594632907 Retrieved August 9 2019 via Google Books Peter Pringle The Rebirth of the Theremin Cello Retrieved 2009 09 20 Theremin Cello oddmusic Retrieved 2009 09 20 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Bryan publisher and demonstrator 2007 06 10 Theremin Cello Seattle Bryan Retrieved 2009 09 20 demonstration playing of a theremincello Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Bryan publisher and player 2007 03 03 Theremin s cello meditation Seattle Bryan Retrieved 2009 09 20 slideshow including internal details of a theremincello replica Radio Squeals turned to Music Popular Science June 1932 p 51 available on popsci com Archived 2011 09 16 at the Wayback Machine Hacking Exposed Linux Linux Security Secrets amp Solutions third ed McGraw Hill Osborne Media 2008 p 298 ISBN 978 0 07 226257 5 Sources editGaleyev Bulat M Translated by Vladimir Chudnovsky 1996 Light and Shadows of a Great Life In Commemoration of the One Hundredth Anniversary of the Birth of Leon Theremin Pioneer of Electronic Art Leonardo Music Journal 6 Retrieved 2007 11 22 Linked from LMJ 6 Lobanova Marina 1999 Lew Termen Erfinder Tschekist Spion Neue Zeitschrift fur Musik in German 4 50 53 Glinsky Albert 2000 Theremin Ether Music and Espionage Urbana Illinois University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 02582 2 Mattis Olivia 1989 06 16 An Interview with Leon Theremin Olivia Mattis and Leon Theremin in Bourges France Translated by Nina Boguslawsky Alejandro Tkaczevski Retrieved 2007 11 21 copied here Theremin Vox An Interview with Leon Theremin Termen Lew Erinnerungen an A F Joffe in German Website of the Institute of Media Archeology Austria Archived from the original on 2009 05 11 Retrieved 2009 04 25 Sections translated by Felix Eder from the Russian originals in Zhuze V P ed 1973 Vospominaniya ob A F Ioffe Memories of A F Joffe Nauka Leningrad Wright Peter 1987 Spycatcher The Candid Autobiography of a Senior Intelligence Officer New York Viking ISBN 0 670 82055 5 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Leon Theremin nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leon Theremin Andrey Smirnov theremin sensors workshop selected demonstrations of Theremin sensors and laser bugging Retrieved 2009 09 11 Theremin Centre Moscow holds Lev Sergeivitch Termen archives Russian only Retrieved from https en 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