yes infact they can hear much louder than that they can here stuff we cant even hear
There are 7 octaves, plus a minor third, on standard Grand Pianos. Therefore, the lowest accidental (or black key) would be a B Flat.
The piano can play in any key because it is chromatic.
when you strike a piano key you get a musical note out of the piano.
E# is F on the piano, as F is 1/2 step up from e. b# would likewise be C on the piano.
The piano key is connected to a lever inside the piano, which transmits the pressure to a small hammer that strikes a stretched wire inside the piano, producing a note that is amplified by the wooden body of the piano.
A#/Bb
There are 7 octaves, plus a minor third, on standard Grand Pianos. Therefore, the lowest accidental (or black key) would be a B Flat.
Piano is tuned in the key of C
The piano can play in any key because it is chromatic.
when you strike a piano key you get a musical note out of the piano.
E# is F on the piano, as F is 1/2 step up from e. b# would likewise be C on the piano.
The key of B flat on the piano has two flats (Bb and Eb).
The piano key is connected to a lever inside the piano, which transmits the pressure to a small hammer that strikes a stretched wire inside the piano, producing a note that is amplified by the wooden body of the piano.
Indeed, only one of the Cs on the piano is 'middle C'. The others aren't given a specific name (although the lowest might be called "sub-contra C" sometimes.) A piano tuner calls different C's by numbers, numbering the lowest C1. (The A below that is A0.) The next C up is C2, and so on to C8, the highest key on an 88-key keyboard. Middle C, then, is C4.
The last note on the 88-key piano is an A.
piano has more keys
There is no such key.