Arturia Wurlitzer V Review By now, you probably know I’m a keyboard player and which is more important, I’m a big analog fan, so, imagine my happiness when the V Collection 4 by Arturia came to my hands! We are talking here about some of the finest emulations and modelling of the finest vintage analog synths, but, not just that.
Apr 19, 2015 Arturia Wurlitzer-V muzykujkropkacom. Unsubscribe from muzykujkropkacom? Cancel Unsubscribe. Subscribe Subscribed Unsubscribe.
This collection features an extremely awesome modelling of one of the greatest and most sought after vintage electric pianos: the venerable Wurlitzer 200a, AKA The Wurly! From Beatles to Radiohead, the Wurly can be heard in countless records (The Dark Side of The Moon, anyone?), and Arturia has made a great work in this emulation full of extras and goodies, and of course, it sounds awesome! Lets check it out A little history. Vajeh Shenas Farsi Ocr there. The Wurly is an electro-mechanical piano that instead of strings uses reeds for every note; the sound produced by those reeds is picked by internal microphones (just like guitar mics) and then amplified.
It was introduced in the late 50s and produced until early 80s. It sounds great through guitar pedals and amp. Also, it featured a vibrato (tremolo, actually) circuit pretty much like those found on guitar amps. Well, Arturia has managed to model all of this and added some awesome functions under the hood. You get the Wurly itself with its volume and vibrato controls plus a sustain pedal, but you also get a pedal-board with five slots available (more on this later) and three output possibilities: D.I. Box with a reverb unit (lexicon style), Guitar amp with four cabinet options, and four classical miking options (more on this later, too), and a leslie amp with rotary speed control and again a reverb unit. Under the hood you get lots of options, from Eq, to velocity curve, pickup mics positions, axis and impedance, vibrato rate, dynamics, octave stretch, hammer hardness, hammer, note off and pedal noise levels, and a very clever harmonic variation menu.