Questions tagged [piano]

For questions about music written for piano, playing the piano, maintenance of a piano, or other general questions about pianos.

The musical instrument now called a piano used to be called a "pianoforte." It uses felt tipped hammers driven by keys on a keyboard to strike at strings. When it was originally developed it was able to be played both softly (piano is Italian for soft, and quiet passages will be noted with a small p on sheet music) and loudly (forte is Italian for hard, and loud passages will be noted with a small f on the sheet music), so the combination became the name of the instrument.

Typical modern pianos have 88 keys spanning from the pitches A0 through C8. The keys for C#/Db, D#/Eb, F#/Gb, G#/Ab, and A#/Bb are all set raised above the others and are smaller and coloured black to serve as a visual and tactile reference for players. They also often have a number of foot pedals which change the acoustic tone of the instrument in various ways.

In the 20th century, synthesizers and digital keyboards were invented that could be played like a piano, but which created their sounds entirely digitally. This not only greatly improved upon the portability and practicality of the piano, it allowed for a great range of different tones and electronic instrument sounds that could be played with almost identical technique to the acoustic pianos.

3153 questions
37
votes
9 answers

Why is a grand piano better than an upright piano?

A Grand piano is considered better than an upright piano. Aesthetically I could understand why, but why does the orientation of the strings matter so much sound-wise?
iddober
  • 6,632
  • 14
  • 47
  • 69
33
votes
4 answers

Is it easier to play "softly" on a grand piano?

As I live in an apartment complex, I'm limited to playing on digital pianos; something I can plug headphones into so I don't disturb my neighbors. I recently purchased a Yamaha P95 and have been blown away by the quality of the instrument. However,…
Blank
  • 699
  • 2
  • 6
  • 8
25
votes
7 answers

Why are grand pianos usually black?

Upright pianos are often covered with transparent lacquer, revealing their natural brown wood colour. This is similar to violins, guitars and other classical instruments, where wood structure is clearly visible. Contrary to that, when going to…
texnic
  • 541
  • 2
  • 5
  • 11
25
votes
7 answers

Why can't the piano play middle eastern music?

I'm a beginner pianist, and I asked my teacher about the possibility of playing some Persian music on the piano. He told me it's typically not possible, but didn't really elaborate on why. So why is it that the piano shouldn't be able to play that…
gobifur
  • 251
  • 3
  • 3
19
votes
4 answers

Is it bad for a piano player to work out?

I'm not sure if this is a myth, but is it bad for a pianist to work out (e.g. lift weights)? I've heard that building strength this way will reduce fine muscle control.
user2066880
  • 293
  • 2
  • 5
18
votes
2 answers

Different types of grace notes

This is a definition of a grace note from a Thompson piano course book: But if they don't have any time value, why do I see grace note of different time values? In this picture there is an eighth grace note, but often I also see sixteenth grace…
iddober
  • 6,632
  • 14
  • 47
  • 69
18
votes
4 answers

Tips for background piano playing

I am playing background piano music at a dinner tonight. It is the first time I have done this and I wonder if there are guidelines on the order of pieces or if I can just wildly mix fast and slow, major and minor, jazz and classical. Also are there…
Bananach
  • 301
  • 2
  • 8
17
votes
3 answers

What is this electrical thing in my piano?

What is the bar with the red freehand circle? You can see it has a cord coming out to the right. I'm unable to try plugging it in and seeing what it does because it's an incompatible cord with my locale. The piano is a Baldwin Acrosonic. I don't…
Scimonster
  • 455
  • 1
  • 3
  • 12
16
votes
2 answers

Important to know which note you are playing?

When I'm learning a new piece of music (for piano), I tend to read the notes each time until I know the movement for my hands by memory. At that point I don't know what note I'm playing anymore only the location on the keyboard for my fingers. So…
Stormenet
  • 727
  • 1
  • 7
  • 12
15
votes
8 answers

Is stretching my fingers on the piano healthy?

I'm currently playing a piece which requires big stretches of large intervals across the keyboard. It slightly hurts when I do so, and I am wondering if I should continue to practise like this. My piano teacher suggests fingerings with a…
William GONG
  • 325
  • 2
  • 8
15
votes
9 answers

Are there any tricks to pushing a grand piano?

Are there any tricks to pushing around a stubborn grand piano? Is changing the direction of the wheels simply a question of brute force, or is there some approach I can take that will allow me to be more specific with the piano's movements? In my…
Richard
  • 84,447
  • 18
  • 194
  • 369
14
votes
2 answers

What is the difference between Kurzweil Mark Pro 1, 2, and 3 Pianos

I'm only interested in the piano tone and feel as compared to a good acoustic piano. Are there reasons to pay twice the money for Kurzweil Mark 3 vs Mark 1? Both seem to have the same hammer action design and dimensions, but I haven't tried playing…
audio.zoom
  • 283
  • 2
  • 8
13
votes
4 answers

Why does it sometimes sound good to play a grace note as a lead in to a note in a melody?

While playing around with some simple melodies on my piano i realized that tapping (like a single tone in a trill) the tone one half-tone below in a melody before playing the actual tone sometimes sounds a lot 'more right' than just playing the tone…
Richard
  • 233
  • 2
  • 6
12
votes
2 answers

What are the pros and cons of the Suzuki method of the piano teaching vs. traditional piano teaching methods?

What is a best and most efficient way to start playing piano? Suzuki method or Traditional? I'm 21 years old.
user194076
  • 221
  • 2
  • 4
12
votes
2 answers

Liszt's B minor sonata crescendo

In the last few bars of Liszt's masterpiece, Liszt actually wrote a crescendo which can't possibly be played on the piano. I don't know how to interpret it. How do you approach it? Is that more of a gesture thing (like putting more weight on the…
cfcief
  • 191
  • 7
1
2 3
18 19