Electric pianos (aka digital pianos) are instruments that reproduce the sound made by acoustic pianos. Pianos produce their unique sound by the action of a felted hammers hitting strings of various lengths. Digital pianos replicate this sound with oscillators and speakers. Electric pianos and acoustic pianos are alike in that they have the same keyboard of 88 black and white keys, they produce a similar sound (though not identical), and they can be played in the same manner, especially if the digital piano has weighted keys and a damper pedal.
no....all pianos do not have the same number of keys there are the pianos that have and upper-row and a lower-row and then there are the kiddie pianos that only have like ten keys and then there are organs (i used to have one) the have alot of keys/buttons
Digital pianos can be played just like traditional piano. The feel and sound of it is made to be the same as the traditional piano. They even have more advantages than the real piano.
Most pianos are made of the same combinations of metals. This is an incomplete list: The frame is cast iron, the tuning pegs are steel, as are the bridge pins, the pedals are plated brass.
Forte on a piece of music will appear under the staff line and look like this:f - forteThere are variations on this, you can have double and triple forte markings:ff - fortissimofff - fortississimoThe same goes for pianop - pianopp - pianissimoppp - pianississimo
Yes! But the tone of each keys are different. Actually, it depends on what you mean. If you mean the number of black and what keys on the keyboard, no, they do not all have the same number. A "standard" piano has 88 keys, and that is the most common, but not all pianos have that number.
True
No. On a full size keyboard there are 52 white keys and 36 black keys.
Omg i have the same question cause idkkk
Many different kinds of wood are used to make upright pianos. They have used different wood as time goes by, and they have also used different keys. For example, a piano i bought just recently is made out of mahogany, but one i bought in '80 is made out of birch.
Winkelmann pianos are very good. I don't know what an "Angelus Winkelmann" piano is. Is Angelus the type of Winkelmann piano that you have? See the link here, with a description of the Winkelmann pianos. They were made in Germany. I played on an upright when I was a kid until 16 and it sounded like a grand piano, which I've also played on a few (Kawai's and Yamaha's). It's made me very particular of pianos, just having grown up to the quality of the Winkelmann. The bass was strong and clear, not like a lot of pianos today where the bottom octave keys all blend into each other, almost seeming to sound the same and not well defined. The middle was great, not bright but just right for classical music, the treble to high treble was great, too, but not crystalline like I've rarely heard some pianos, but was still very good compared to a lot of pianos I've tried since. Supposedly, the piano we had was from 1905 and, after a few moves, I don't know where it is now. I am shopping for a piano now and keep wishing I still had that piano, over a grand.
When playing piano, you can use both hands, that's how most operate... Kalisha.