![Arturia wurli v2](https://cdn3.cdnme.se/5447227/9-3/1_64e61dfaddf2b33c615a3cd3.png)
![arturia wurli v2 arturia wurli v2](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0988/4668/products/WurliV2.jpg)
![arturia wurli v2 arturia wurli v2](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/92/11/64/9211643cce69e8859ab1377e9134a14a.jpg)
Nevertheless, the virtual instrument offers plenty of parameters that can help you alter the sound. Keep in mind that this is an electric piano, not a synth, so you can’t really expect too much in terms of sound versatility. Like most instruments in Arturia’s V Collection, the Wurli V2 was created using advanced physical modeling, which resulted in a great sounding and looking emulation. If you would like to add that particular sound to your compositions, then you could very well give Wurli V2 a try.
![arturia wurli v2 arturia wurli v2](https://images.reverb.com/image/upload/s--H91UqiGe--/f_auto,t_large/v1598555130/e0phpzbkbrflqffpmjib.jpg)
The piano was appreciated for its dynamic range – which could vary from bright to overdriven, depending on how you played it – and distinctive timbre. Now, I’m not entirely sure if the Wurlitzer electric piano would figure on such a list, but it’s safe to say that it was a very important instrument that was used by musicians such as Supertramp, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Ray Charles, and Marvin Gaye. If you’re ambitious enough, you could probably put together a long list of musical instruments that helped birth a genre or changed the soundscape of a particular decade. In the 20th century, music was almost completely reinvented.
![Arturia wurli v2](https://cdn3.cdnme.se/5447227/9-3/1_64e61dfaddf2b33c615a3cd3.png)