notes
1. a panel of keys that operate a computer or typewriter. 2. a set of keys on a piano or similar musical instrument.
It is a musical instrument - similar in appearance to a piano. The keys are usually coloured opposite to a piano (white keys black, and black keys coloured black). The strings are 'plucked' in a harpsichord by tiny 'teeth' - instead of being struck by felt hammers as they are in a piano. This gives the instrument its distinctive sound.
A piano.
A piano key is typically larger and longer than keys on other musical instruments, such as a flute or a clarinet.
Weighted keys in a keyboard instrument have a heavier feel, similar to a traditional piano, while unweighted keys are lighter and easier to press. Weighted keys provide more resistance and mimic the feel of playing a real piano, while unweighted keys are more suitable for beginners or players who prefer a lighter touch.
Some instruments similar to the vibraphone are the xylophone and the marimba (wooden), the glockenspiel/Bells (metal) and the piano. All are keyboard instruments, and with the exception of the piano, are played by striking the keys with mallets.
The piano has keys. Also organs, piano accordions and xylophones. And drums have a key for tuning. But any note played on an instrument produces a note which is in a key.
You are playing a musical instrument called the piano, which produces sound by pressing keys that strike strings inside the instrument.
A black note is any of the sharp or flat notes produced by pressing one of the black keys on a piano or similar keyboard instrument.
A piano because it has 88 keys
The Piano.
When the piano was developed by Christofori in the 18th century, it was developed as a fully chromatic instrument. Thus it had both "black" and "white" keys.