Use your computer keyboard or click the piano keys to play the piano. The keyboard's top row of letters corresponds to the white keys, and the row of numbers corresponds to the black keys. You can play multiple notes simultaneously.

Click "Hide note names" above the piano to hide the note names. Click "Mark" to mark notes on the piano. Play the marked notes by clicking the "Play" button (only visible after notes have been marked) or pressing the spacebar on your keyboard.


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Try our free piano exercises and learn to play notes, intervals, chords, and scales on the piano. You'll also find a variety of other exercises that will expand your musical understanding and help you become better at playing the piano.

Use your computer mouse or keyboard to play the virtual piano keyboard (or the device touch screen for mobile devices). You can view the corresponding computer keyboard letters by activating the Real Keys feature. For the entire keyboard spectrum, click it twice.

A virtual piano keyboard is perfect when there isn't a real piano or a keyboard at home or when your piano or keyboard isn't next to a computer. The online piano keyboard simulates a real piano keyboard with 7 1/4 octaves of 88 keys (only five octaves for mobile devices), a sustain pedal, ABC or DoReMe letter notes representation, a Metronome, zoom-in, and a full-screen mode.

Use your computer mouse or keyboard to play the virtual piano keyboard (or the device touch screen for mobile devices). You can view the corresponding computer keyboard letters by activating the "Real Keys" feature. For the entire keyboard spectrum, click it twice.

I am using VMPK - virtual midi piano keyboard, and would like to map its midi output as an input to pianoteq, but I am not sure how to go about this. I think I need a connection bus or some sort of digital interface. Anyone know how to do this? I searched and found other users were using VMPK on GNU/linux.

Thanks, I'll try it out. I want to be able to produce sound using the computer keyboard, but letter keys in Pianoteq are mapped as hotkeys. Documentation search seems only to yield results about external keyboard. Also, I want to use my own key mapping.

Try typing "control-k"; this brings up a window showing a computer keyboard. The hotkeys are disabled when you do this and you can use your computer keyboard to play notes. USB-connected midi "real" keyboards can be easily obtained for not much money these days....

Good, I didn't know. It says right there in the Windows menu. A nice selection of controls are available in this view, too. The keyboard range, though, is much larger in VMPK, and a pure virtual keyboard front-end to pianoteq.

I love my CME X-key Air37. Like the NanoKey, but the keys have full width for piano keys (not nano). Kinda clicky, but that is ignorable in short order (especially with headphones on). It's great for travel, with just my tablet and some headphones.

I want to be able to play one Note on the Virtual Keyboard and have an option to play one of many different Chords like on Roland FANTOM keyboard and Akai MPC and many other VST and DAW programs. This way would allow me to take advantage of the potential of many different VST programs that don't have Chord assigning ability.

as a note: some people aren't keyboard players. i can do a bunch but would never say i'm a keyboardist. and chordz and ripchord to help with complex chord-progressions. my brother, a keyboardist extraordinaire, on the other hand, has what seems like 12 fingers on 2 hands on each of his 4 arms...

Even if you don't have a real piano at your disposal, you can easily learn music theory or try out the melodies that come to your mind with this online tool, which you can use anywhere, anytime.

Playing the Virtual Piano and using its tools is very simple and intuitive, however below you can find the more detailed description on how to play piano online and a brief introduction on musical terms, for beginner pianists.



To record and play your piano track, press the REC and PLAY buttons. The maximum length of a track is one minute, each time you record, it automatically erases the previous track.



The virtual piano can automatically play the major and minor triads for every single note you play on the piano keyboard. You can choose this mode by selecting the MAJOR and MINOR buttons.



There are many scales, the most used in occidental music are: Major, Natural Minor, Harmonic Minor, Melodic Minor, Major Pentatonic, Minor Pentatonic and Whole-Tone. The virtual piano can help you learn the musical scales, it can automatically play the scales for every note you play on the keyboard.

You can activate this mode by pressing the ON/OFF button, and then choose scales with the Scale Type button. By playing the first three octaves of the keyboard you will get ascending scales, by playing the higher octaves instead you will get descending scales. You can also adjust the running speed of the scales by changing the metronome bpm.

* You will notice that the Melodic Minor scale when it is descending is the same as the Natural Minor.



Useful for beginners to know the names of the notes, their position on the piano keyboard, and to memorize the musical scales. To activate these options, press the NOTES and PC KEYS buttons.



It's a tool used by all musicians for study and exercises. You can turn the metronome on or off by pressing the PLAY/PAUSE button in the virtual piano toolbar. Set the tempo (bpm = beats per minute) with the + and - buttons.

You don't really need an instruction manual. just play your music by pressing the keys...You can click on the notes with the mouse, but the computer keyboard can also be used as a mini-piano. In this case, with a QWERTY keyboard, the C scale starts on the keys A,S,D,F,G... (with an AZERTY, use Q,S,D,F,G).

Finally, the second slider is used to transpose the notes you play. This is very handy for singers who want to use our virtual piano as a rehearsal instrument. The keyboard then adapts perfectly to the chosen scale.

The handheld free reed organs of that time were manufactured according to the same principle of bellows. Unlike the church harmonium, on which the air is compressed by a pedalboard, the bellows of the tiny instrument is moved by one of the musician's hands. Only one hand can therefore play on the keyboard, unless of course a third person is delegated to this task alone .

While these handheld harmoniums have been replaced by other systems in the West, they are still very present in Indian music, with a switching mechanism that allows the 22 notes (shrutis) of Indian music to be played on only 12 keys per octave.

Electric keyboards were dominant in the 20th century until the 1970s. These large cases contained an electric engine that produced the necessary air overpressure. They often weighed several kilos or tens of kilos, were almost indestructible but offered musicians only a rather ridiculous pitch range... sometimes barely more than an octave!

Then, the miniaturization of electronics turned (as in many fields) the weight/capacity ratio of keyboards upside down. The era of synthesizers saw the development of instruments at a very low price (and of very uneven quality) and replaced the harmonium of the past by entertaining instruments with multiple sounds. The old French name "guide-chant", which used to designate pocket keyboards has disappeared. Now, we just talk about "keyboard" or "synthesizer"...

Basically it chooses 24 notes randomly spread over the piano keyboard and repeats that chord again and again, systematically varying individual note volumes (and after a while also timings) to generate a kind of minimal music. Code can be found here: One chord requiem

I am working on a new app and I want to implement an octave of piano keys in there. Unfortunately, in order to save space, I can't put the black keys in between the white ones, I need them to be aligned (unlike on a real piano). Now, I can't decide between letting them start on the C, or the D.

Notwithstanding the fact that a keyboard player would hate it no matter what, from a logical standpoint neither can make sense, and for a reason: it would depend whether, in context, the black keys would be sharps or flats.

Virtual MIDI Piano Keyboard is a MIDI events generator and receiver. It doesn't produce any soundby itself, but can be used to drive a MIDI synthesizer (either hardware orsoftware, internal or external). You can use the computer's keyboard to playMIDI notes, and also the mouse. You can use the Virtual MIDI Piano Keyboardto display the played MIDI notes from another instrument or MIDI file player.To do so, connect the other MIDI port to the input port of VMPK.

The alphanumeric keyboard mapping can be configured from inside the programusing the GUI interface, and the settings are stored in XML files. Some mapsfor Spanish, German and French keyboard layouts are provided, translated fromthe ones provided by VKeybd.

There are also hardware MIDI interfaces for computers, providing MIDI IN and OUT ports, where you can attach MIDI cables to communicate the computer with external MIDI instruments. Without needing hardware interfaces, the computer can also use MIDI software. An example is VMPK, which provides MIDI IN and OUT ports. You can attach virtual MIDI cables to the VMPK's ports, to connect the program to other programs or to the computer's physical MIDI interface ports. More details about this coming later.You usually want to connect the MIDI output from VMPK to the input of some synthesizer which transforms MIDI into sound. Another common destination for the connection would be a MIDI monitor that translates MIDI events into readable text. This will help you to understand what kind of information is transmitted using the MIDI protocol. In Linux you cantry KMidimon and in Windows MIDIOX. 2351a5e196

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