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Wurly - Electric Piano by AudioThing (Released)

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Comments

  • @audiothing said:
    Yes, it might be a bit too quiet, but depending on the settings, with a simple C major chord played at full velocity and max volume, you can reach about -4/-5dB peak on the channel.
    Anyway, we are adding a global boost control in the next update, and some optimization among other things.

    Oh, could you maybe add some LFOs, to be able to modulate things within the app with a better resolution than midi? Or do you think that wouldn't make a big difference? I would love to be able to modulate the tune a tiny bit for example. But I generally think that would make the whole thing more interesting.

    And of course it would be cool, if you can choose between a bunch of scales.

  • @pseudophysics said:

    @audiothing said:
    Yes, it might be a bit too quiet, but depending on the settings, with a simple C major chord played at full velocity and max volume, you can reach about -4/-5dB peak on the channel.
    Anyway, we are adding a global boost control in the next update, and some optimization among other things.

    Oh, could you maybe add some LFOs, to be able to modulate things within the app with a better resolution than midi? Or do you think that wouldn't make a big difference? I would love to be able to modulate the tune a tiny bit for example. But I generally think that would make the whole thing more interesting.

    And of course it would be cool, if you can choose between a bunch of scales.

    LFOs and scales! I second this suggestion

  • Doesn’t getting it to confirm to scales kind of defeats the purpose of a piano? Its chromaticism is one of its strengths, surely?

  • I add modulation by tacking on modulation apps in the mixer channel.
    Wasn't the goal of Wurly to replicate an original hardware instrument? But I welcome a volume boost, thank you.

  • edited November 27

    be nice to have some on-board efx...will need to run in a host and use 3rd party efx. and the key up noise is horrendous! they made a noise but not THAT loud....Yes I know it can be turned down, but i needs to be much lower in all the presets. Seems pretty accurate to my ear...

  • edited November 27

    This one looks great but after listening to the demos, I'm a little hesitant to buy it.
    Coming from sampled 140B Wurlys, I kinda miss their more organic and less aggressive sounds compared to the 200's but that certainly wasn't the purpose of this app ;)

    @audiothing Have you ever played one, or at least a sampled version of a 140B in good condition?

  • @rs2000 said:
    This one looks great but after listening to the demos, I'm a little hesitant to buy it.

    I really like the sound of it. It is the first electric piano app I open when creating.

  • edited November 27

    @michael_m said:
    Doesn’t getting it to confirm to scales kind of defeats the purpose of a piano? Its chromaticism is one of its strengths, surely?

    you call it only being chromatic a strength? @_@

    well, you could replikate something and do it well as they did. you could also make it something new. and audiothing appears to be into experimental approaches so i shoot my shot here. look at the handclapper for example. based on a real thing, with added functions to make it more interesting.

    and how cool would it be to play arabic tunings on a wurly? never been heard before.

    if they dont do it its fine. i find my way around it. i just use more instances, play them monophonically with different pitches and use midi lfos. while others enjoy the classic vibes :P

  • edited November 27

    just realized that apesofts electic vintage has all these features already :)))) ill get that one

  • @pseudophysics said:

    @michael_m said:
    Doesn’t getting it to confirm to scales kind of defeats the purpose of a piano? Its chromaticism is one of its strengths, surely?

    you call it only being chromatic a strength? @_@

    well, you could replikate something and do it well as they did. you could also make it something new. and audiothing appears to be into experimental approaches so i shoot my shot here. look at the handclapper for example. based on a real thing, with added functions to make it more interesting.

    and how cool would it be to play arabic tunings on a wurly? never been heard before.

    if they dont do it its fine. i find my way around it. i just use more instances, play them monophonically with different pitches and use midi lfos. while others enjoy the classic vibes :P

    It’s not ONLY chromatic - being chromatic opens it up to every scale based on 12-ET.

    But you don’t need the piano itself to do that. You could just learn how to play the scale, or use an app that limits input notes.

    I can’t see redirecting notes on a piano being very high on most people’s lists of enhancements.

  • @pseudophysics said:
    just realized that apesofts electic vintage has all these features already :)))) ill get that one

    But is it really any better?

  • @michael_m said:

    @pseudophysics said:

    @michael_m said:
    Doesn’t getting it to confirm to scales kind of defeats the purpose of a piano? Its chromaticism is one of its strengths, surely?

    you call it only being chromatic a strength? @_@

    well, you could replikate something and do it well as they did. you could also make it something new. and audiothing appears to be into experimental approaches so i shoot my shot here. look at the handclapper for example. based on a real thing, with added functions to make it more interesting.

    and how cool would it be to play arabic tunings on a wurly? never been heard before.

    if they dont do it its fine. i find my way around it. i just use more instances, play them monophonically with different pitches and use midi lfos. while others enjoy the classic vibes :P

    It’s not ONLY chromatic - being chromatic opens it up to every scale based on 12-ET.

    But you don’t need the piano itself to do that. You could just learn how to play the scale, or use an app that limits input notes.

    I can’t see redirecting notes on a piano being very high on most people’s lists of enhancements.

    Yes, definitely - the simple solution is to use this as an AUv3 and put it through an app offering custom scale quantization like Rozeta Scaler, NoteToBe, Harmonicer etc.

  • @Kylient said:

    @pseudophysics said:
    just realized that apesofts electic vintage has all these features already :)))) ill get that one

    But is it really any better?

    Aren’t they different pianos? I thought Electric Vintage was a Rhodes?

  • @michael_m said:

    @Kylient said:

    @pseudophysics said:
    just realized that apesofts electic vintage has all these features already :)))) ill get that one

    But is it really any better?

    Aren’t they different pianos? I thought Electric Vintage was a Rhodes?

    I think @pseudophysics knows that and was just joking when he said he might grab that instead. I could be wrong. But indeed, they are totally different and rightly so!

  • @Gavinski said:

    @michael_m said:

    @Kylient said:

    @pseudophysics said:
    just realized that apesofts electic vintage has all these features already :)))) ill get that one

    But is it really any better?

    Aren’t they different pianos? I thought Electric Vintage was a Rhodes?

    I think @pseudophysics knows that and was just joking when he said he might grab that instead. I could be wrong. But indeed, they are totally different and rightly so!

    I wasn't joking actually :)

    A Rhodes is even better, if it sounds good. And it seems to sound pretty nice. It's not heavily important for me to get a specific replica. I was mostly searching for imitations of instruments that I can experiment with. That's why I also bought a SWAM Cello. Not to imitate playing Cello with it.

    And I like microtonality. I guess, I'm in a minority here with my interests. It also seems that people on this forum are a bit older than me and have a different focus.

    I hope the Apesoft Rhodes also has some exotic microtonal tunings. The manual says it offers a special feature which allows to setup your own scale through the Musical Keyboard. No idea what it means exactly, but sounds promising. I own a Roland digital piano, where I can tune every key individually. Pretty sick. And it sounds great. It also has a Rhodes preset and that sounds pretty decent. Especially with the hammer mechanic emulation. Anyway, I'm veering off… back to Wurly

  • edited November 27

    Thing is, if you like experimenting, no inbuilt modulation will ever rival what you could do using external modulators. And if you really like microtonal stuff, you should look at the app Entonal Studio - that will allow you to play any instrument Auv3s microtonally. Happy noodling whatever you decide 👍

    @pseudophysics said:

    @Gavinski said:

    @michael_m said:

    @Kylient said:

    @pseudophysics said:
    just realized that apesofts electic vintage has all these features already :)))) ill get that one

    But is it really any better?

    Aren’t they different pianos? I thought Electric Vintage was a Rhodes?

    I think @pseudophysics knows that and was just joking when he said he might grab that instead. I could be wrong. But indeed, they are totally different and rightly so!

    I wasn't joking actually :)

    A Rhodes is even better, if it sounds good. And it seems to sound pretty nice. It's not heavily important for me to get a specific replica. I was mostly searching for imitations of instruments that I can experiment with. That's why I also bought a SWAM Cello. Not to imitate playing Cello with it.

    And I like microtonality. I guess, I'm in a minority here with my interests. It also seems that people on this forum are a bit older than me and have a different focus.

    I hope the Apesoft Rhodes also has some exotic microtonal tunings. The manual says it offers a special feature which allows to setup your own scale through the Musical Keyboard. No idea what it means exactly, but sounds promising. I own a Roland digital piano, where I can tune every key individually. Pretty sick. And it sounds great. It also has a Rhodes preset and that sounds pretty decent. Especially with the hammer mechanic emulation. Anyway, I'm veering off… back to Wurly

  • edited November 27

    @Gavinski said:
    Thing is, if you like experimenting, no inbuilt modulation will ever rival what you could do using external modulators. And if you really like microtonal stuff, you should look at the app Entonal Studio - that will allow you to play any instrument Auv3s microtonally. Happy noodling whatever you decide 👍

    Thanks! happy noodling to you, too mate!

    Inbuilt modulation might be of higher resolution than midi cc. You were actually just mentioning that the other day ;) But yeah, I'm already modulating everything with the LFOs in Drambo and it's great fun.

    And thanks for the heads up, Entonal studio is on my list for quite some time, i'm just waiting for a sale :) But it needs MPE synths if you want polyphonic microtonality, as you know. If it doesn't go on sale, I will definitely buy it. But I just wanted to make sure to wait after BF. The developer didn't test it in Drambo, which is my main DAW/Host, just hope it will work.

  • @pseudophysics said:

    @Gavinski said:
    Thing is, if you like experimenting, no inbuilt modulation will ever rival what you could do using external modulators. And if you really like microtonal stuff, you should look at the app Entonal Studio - that will allow you to play any instrument Auv3s microtonally. Happy noodling whatever you decide 👍

    Thanks! happy noodling to you, too mate!

    Inbuilt modulation might be of higher resolution than midi cc. You were actually just mentioning that the other day ;) But yeah, I'm already modulating everything with the LFOs in Drambo and it's great fun.

    And thanks for the heads up, Entonal studio is on my list for quite some time, i'm just waiting for a sale :) But it needs MPE synths if you want polyphonic microtonality, as you know. If it doesn't go on sale, I will definitely buy it. But I just wanted to make sure to wait after BF. The developer didn't test it in Drambo, which is my main DAW/Host, just hope it will work.

    That’s true about internal modulation, though most apps have very basic internal modulation systems, including (imo) those Audiothing apps that have it. Using apeMatrix is a good way to do high res modulation on any plugin with exposed parameters while keeping the modular vibe of AUM. Ah, Drambo maybe offers that too I guess?

    Oh yeah, Entonal - forgot about the MPE thing. Do I remember wrongly though that it does actually work with non-MPE instruments? I just tried it with Wurly now. Entonal was set to MPE, Wurly is not MPE, but it seemed to work fine. Best to confirm with someone else though, that’s the first time I have grabbed Entonal since it came out. I should use it more, microtonality is fun but not something I ever got deep into.

  • I like copying the parts I do in Wurly and paste in electric vintage (and vice versa) and panning 50/50, personally

  • @pax-eterna said:
    be nice to have some on-board efx...will need to run in a host and use 3rd party efx. and the key up noise is horrendous! they made a noise but not THAT loud....Yes I know it can be turned down, but i needs to be much lower in all the presets. Seems pretty accurate to my ear...

    We are working on a synth at the moment and just decided to add some built-in effects. If it works well I'll probably add those to Wurly as well, but it's a bit early to say.
    I have 2 Wurlitzer, 200 and 200A, they both make some very brutal noise up sound when recorded with a microphone. Anyway, if you want to keep the noise lower, just lock the parameter while scrolling the presets.

    @rs2000 said:
    @audiothing Have you ever played one, or at least a sampled version of a 140B in good condition?

    Unfortunately not. But I'd love to get a 106p one day...

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