AR-1264 Theremin in
Musical Instrument Museum, Phoenix, Arizona
Concert music The first orchestral composition written for theremin was
Symphonic Mystery, which premiered in 1924. However, most of the sheet music was lost after its second performance. In 1934
Edgard Varèse completed the composition "Equatorial" for two theremin cellos and percussion. His work was a stated influence throughout the career of
Frank Zappa, who also composed for theremin. Maverick composer Percy Grainger chose to use ensembles of four or six theremins (in preference to a string quartet) for his two earliest experimental
Free Music compositions (1935–1937) because of the instrument's complete 'gliding' freedom of pitch. Musician
Jean-Michel Jarre used the instrument in his concerts
Oxygène in Moscow in 1997 and
Space of Freedom in
Gdańsk in 2005, providing also a short history of Leon Theremin's life. The five-piece
Spaghetti Western Orchestra use a theremin as a replacement for Edda Dell'Orso's vocals in their interpretation of
Ennio Morricone's "Once Upon a Time in the West". A large-scale theremin concerto,
Kalevi Aho's Concerto for Theremin and Chamber Orchestra "Eight Seasons" (2011) was written for
Carolina Eyck. The recording of the premiere won an
Echo Klassik in the category "Concert Recording of the Year" in 2015. The theremin concerto "Dancefloor With Pulsing" by the French composer
Régis Campo was also written for
Eyck and premiered with the
Brussels Philharmonic in 2018. Other concert composers who have written for theremin include
Bohuslav Martinů,
Percy Grainger,
Iraida Yusupova,,
Fazıl Say, and
Dalit Warshaw. In 2019 in Kobe, Japan, the Matryomin ensemble, a group of 289 theremin players that included
Natasha Theremin, Masha Theremin and
Peter Theremin, the daughter, granddaughter and great-grandson of the inventor, achieved a
Guinness world record as the largest ensemble of the instrument. The name
Matryomin is a
portmanteau by its inventor of the words
matryoshka and
theremin. Other notable contemporary theremin players include
Lydia Kavina,
Pamelia Kurstin,
Katica Illényi, and
Thorwald Jørgensen.
Popular music Theremins and theremin-like sounds started to be incorporated into
popular music from the end of the 1940s (with a series of
Samuel Hoffman/
Harry Revel collaborations) and has continued, with various degrees of popularity, to the present.
Lothar and the Hand People were the first rock band known to perform live with a theremin in November 1965. In fact, Lothar was the name they gave to their
Moog theremin.
The Beach Boys' 1966 single "
Good Vibrations"—though it does not contain a theremin—is the most frequently cited example of the instrument in pop music. The song features a similar-sounding instrument invented by
Paul Tanner called an
Electro-Theremin. Upon release, the single prompted an unexpected revival in theremins and increased the awareness of
analog synthesizers. In response to requests by the band,
Moog Music began producing its own brand of
ribbon-controlled instruments which would mimic the sound of a theremin.
Frank Zappa included the theremin on the albums
Freak Out! (1966) and ''
We're Only in It for the Money'' (1967).
Brian Jones of
the Rolling Stones also used the instrument on the group's 1967 albums
Between the Buttons and
Their Satanic Majesties Request.
Tesla guitarist
Frank Hannon used a theremin in the band's song "Edison's Medicine" from the 1991 album
Psychotic Supper. Hannon is also seen using the instrument in the song's music video at the 2:40 mark. The Lothars are a Boston-area band formed in early 1997 whose CDs have featured as many as four theremins played at once – a first for pop music. Although credited with a on the track "Mysterons" from the album
Dummy,
Portishead used a
monophonic synthesizer to achieve theremin-like effects, as confirmed by
Adrian Utley, who is credited as playing the instrument; on the songs "Half Day Closing", "Humming", "The Rip", and "Machine Gun" he has used a custom-made theremin.
Page McConnell, keyboardist of the American rock band
Phish, plays the theremin on rare occasions. His last notable performance was on 6 August 2017, the final evening of the band's 13-night residency at
Madison Square Garden. When
Simon and Garfunkel performed their song "
The Boxer" during a concert at Madison Square Garden in December 2003, they utilized a theremin. The original recording of the song had featured a steel guitar and a piccolo trumpet in unison in the solo interlude, but for this performance, thereminist Rob Schwimmer played the solo.
Film music Russian composer
Dmitri Shostakovich was one of the first to incorporate parts for the theremin in
orchestral pieces, including a use in his
score for the film (, 1931,
Leonid Trauberg and
Grigori Kozintsev). While the theremin was not widely used in
classical music performances, the instrument found great success in many motion pictures, notably
Spellbound,
The Lost Weekend,
The Red House (all three written by
Miklós Rózsa, the composer who pioneered the use of the instrument in Hollywood scores),
The Spiral Staircase,
Rocketship X-M,
The Day the Earth Stood Still,
The Thing from Another World,
Castle in the Air, and
The Ten Commandments. The theremin is played and identified as such in the
Jerry Lewis movie
The Delicate Delinquent. The theremin is prominent in the score for the 1956 short film
A Short Vision, which was aired on
The Ed Sullivan Show the same year that it was used by the Hungarian composer
Mátyás Seiber. More recent appearances in film scores include
Monster House,
Ed Wood,
The Machinist and
The Electrical Life of Louis Wain (2021), (last three featuring
Lydia Kavina), as well as
First Man (2018). A theremin was not used for the soundtrack of
Forbidden Planet, for which
Bebe and Louis Barron built disposable oscillator circuits and a
ring modulator to create the electronic tonalities used in the film. Los Angeles–based thereminist Charles Richard Lester is featured on the soundtrack of
Monster House and has performed the US premiere of
Gavriil Popov's 1932 score for
Komsomol – Patron of Electrification with the
Los Angeles Philharmonic and
Esa-Pekka Salonen in 2007. In Lenny Abrahamson's 2014 film,
Frank, Clara, the character played by
Maggie Gyllenhaal, plays the theremin in a band named Soronprfbs.
Theatre and performing arts Charlie Rosen, orchestrator of the
Broadway musical Be More Chill, credits the show as being the first on Broadway to have a theremin in its band. In 2005, composer
Lera Auerbach wrote for a theremin in her ballet music for
The Little Mermaid by choreographer
John Neumaier. In 2011 she used it again in her ballet music for
Cinderella.
Television • In May 2007, the
White Castle American hamburger restaurant chain introduced a television advertisement centered around a live theremin performance by musician Jon Bernhardt of the band
The Lothars. It is the only known example of a theremin performance being the focus of an advertisement. • Celia Sheen plays the theremin in the
Midsomer Murders series. • In October 2008, comedian, musician, and theremin enthusiast
Bill Bailey played a theremin during his performance of Bill Bailey's Remarkable Guide to the Orchestra at the Royal Albert Hall, which has subsequently been televised. He had previously also written an article, presented a radio show and incorporated the theremin in some of his televised comedy tours. • Charlie Draper plays the theremin in the soundtrack (written by
Natalie Holt) for TV series
Loki on
Disney+. • In
The Big Bang Theory episode from January of 2011, "The Bus Pants Utilization", Jim Parson's character Sheldon Cooper plays the theremin. Parsons did not feel he played it well.
Video games • A theremin-inspired tune serves as the theme for the Edison family in the NES port of
Maniac Mansion •
Lydia Kavina's solo theremin is featured on the soundtrack for the 2006
MMORPG computer game
Soul of the Ultimate Nation, composed by
Howard Shore.
The First Theremin Concert for Extraterrestrials station
The First Theremin Concert for Extraterrestrials was the world's first musical
METI broadcast dispatched from the Evpatoria deep-space communications complex in Crimea, and was sent seven years before NASA's
Across the Universe message. Seven different melodies were transmitted from audio-cassette recordings of the theremin being played by Lydia Kavina, Yana Aksenova, and Anton Kerchenko, all from the Moscow Theremin Center. These seven melodies were: • "Egress alone I to the Ride" by E. Shashina • Finale of the
9th Symphony by Beethoven •
The Four Seasons: "Spring" – Allegro by Vivaldi • "
The Swan" by Saint-Saëns • "
Vocalise" by Rachmaninoff • "
Summertime" by Gershwin • Russian folk song "
Kalinka" They were played in succession six times over the span of three days from August to September 2001 during the transmission of
Teen Age Message, an interstellar radio message. == Similar instruments ==