No, the word "pianoist" does not exist in standard English. The correct term for someone who plays the piano is "pianist." This term is widely recognized and used in musical contexts.
Yes, B sharp does exist in music theory. It is the enharmonic equivalent of C natural, meaning that they are the same pitch but spelled differently.
Yes, C flat does exist in music theory. It is the enharmonic equivalent of B natural, meaning that they are the same pitch but spelled differently.
Yes, F flat does exist in music theory. It is the enharmonic equivalent of E natural, meaning that they are the same pitch but spelled differently.
Yes, E sharp does exist on the musical scale. It is the enharmonic equivalent of F natural, meaning they are the same pitch but written differently depending on the context of the music.
The Lyrics do not exist and everything you hear is actually instrumental.
yes
Yes he is
Tuomas Holopainen is - and always was - the keyboardist.
Dentist, Pianoist, etc.
Steve Wonder is a blind singer/pianoist
The correct spelling is "pianist" (one who plays the piano).
Beethoven, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Josef Hoffman, Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli
To exist is "exister" in French.
You don't, you just need to be extremely, extremely good at piano. About grade 8
well she was a famous pianoist of her lifetime , that's one of them . anyone ideas?
to exist = to be = esse
Hayato Gokudera's mother is a young pianoist. When Hayato's father saw her, it was love at first sight.