C sharp, D flat
(C#, Db)
You could call a piano a keyboard.
I do not believe there are any longer names for pianos. In early history, the idea of pianos started out with harpsichords, etc. ... but the invention of the piano itself is not a short-form of any word.
I don't know about names, but there are many different types of pianos. There are upright pianos, baby grands, grands, concert grands, etc. There are also electric keyboards and digital keyboards that are like pianos without hammers.
Organ. Piano. That's like asking "What color is blue?"
A sharp and B flat.
'Named notes', CDEFGABC pre-date pianos by almost a thousand years. Sharps and flats are a modification of a named note, they do not need their own names. Many early pianos had the natural keys in black and the accidentals in white.
Lead Guitar-jake pitts Rhythm Guitar/Violins/pianos-jeremy ferguson aka Jinxx
You could call a piano a keyboard.
I do not believe there are any longer names for pianos. In early history, the idea of pianos started out with harpsichords, etc. ... but the invention of the piano itself is not a short-form of any word.
I don't know about names, but there are many different types of pianos. There are upright pianos, baby grands, grands, concert grands, etc. There are also electric keyboards and digital keyboards that are like pianos without hammers.
steve paul ben tom rob corey ray joe kevin rambo
It is not possible for one to find a full list of black listed names. This list is kept private in order to keep the privacy of others, who are on the list, intact.
Apollo, Midnight, Tottie, Coal, Beauty.....many possible names!!!
Organ. Piano. That's like asking "What color is blue?"
A sharp and B flat.
Steinway Mason & Hamlin Bosendorfer Bechstein Yamaha Kawai Baldwin Sohmer Wurlitzer Kimball
The Wissner Piano Company (also known as Wissner & Sons) was established by Otto Wissner and his sons, William and Otto, Jr. in 1878. Their factories were located in Brooklyn, New York. Wissner is one of the lesser-known American piano manufacturers who built superb pianos of the highest quality and construction, but because of poor marketing, never achieved the world wide recognition they deserved. Their pianos were some of the finest, most expensive pianos money could buy. In addition to building pianos under the Wissner and Wissner & Sons brand names, the firm built pianos under the brand names of Leckerling, Reinhard, and Putnam. In the early 20th Century the firm was controlled by the Jansen Piano Company. The Wissner Company went out of business in about 1942 with the onset of World War 2.