As well as being fully polyphonic, a Rhodes or Wurli has a sound that varies considerably with keyboard velocity, from soft, rounded bell-like tones to clangorous 'thunks'. Indeed, electromechanical pianos have always been difficult to reproduce using samples. The factors that made them go out of fashion in the first place haven't gone away - they're still big and heavy, they still haven't got MIDI, and they still only have one patch - but it seems that players want the sound, and prefer not to make do with sampled substitutes. These days, the wheel has turned full circle, and even the tattiest examples fetch hundreds on the second-hand market. But of course, theirs isn't the only one around.Īt the height of the DX7's popularity in the '80s, you couldn't give away a Fender Rhodes or a Wurlitzer EP200. Applied Acoustic Systems, known best for their Tassman software synth, have now used their modelling technology to create an electric piano plug-in.
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