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.


Virtual Piano 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.

Every physical computer keyboard allows you to play notes from two octaves between C3 to C5.The white keys are mapped to the second row of keys: Tab, Q, ..., [, ] and Backslash.The black keys are mapped to the first row of keys: 1, 2, ..., =, Backspace.For example, C3 is played by pressing Tab while C#3 is played by pressing 1 and D3 is played by pressing Q and so on.Note that B4 is played by pressing the backslash key, while the Enter key plays C5.

If you have an external keyboard with a navigation cluster and a numeric keypad,then you can play three octaves from C3 to C6.The Delete key will play C5, Home - C#5, End - D5 and so on to 7 on the numpad being F5 and so on.

The keys from the row A,S,D and the row Z,X,C are programmed to play white key chords for rich melodies.Moreover, with advanced options you can assign any user-defined chord or single note to any key of the computer keyboard.Tick the CHORD checkbox to indicate a chord on the piano keyboard and then check it off to create a custom-made chord button.This button will play your chord but it can also be configured to be associated with a computer keyboard key.

You can record anything played by this virtual piano keyboard and play it back at will.To start and stop recording check and uncheck the box RECORD. A playback button will appear automatically.You can have many playback buttons: each with its own recording. You can even play back more than one recording at the same time while making another recording to combine them.

Please donate if you find this feature useful.I had to buy a more expensive hosting service to be able to run the script which generates MIDI files.And generally I struggle to find the time to work on my virtual pianobecause the website brings so little money that I need to focus all my efforts on my job just to survive financially.

Your recordings and your custom chords are stored as buttons which can be dragged around to shift position.You can save all your buttons as a text file to your hard drive and then load this file later.Each button can be renamed and configured to be triggered by any key from the computer keyboard.You can program your computer keyboard so that each key plays a custom chord or a playback recording and then save the layout for later.

This is an online piano in the sense that it needs a live Internet connection to work.But there is an offline version available as a single HTML file that you can open in your browser without being connected to the Internet.Note that the offline version does not have certain features which require a connection.It won't save your work and you can't download audio files of your recordings.The better sound quality option is not available.You can use it offline for private personal use including in a school classroom or in a private class.Contact me directly if you are interested.

Load better soundsThe default sound files are optimized for speed of loading so that you can start playing the piano immediately without waiting for the sounds to load.However, this comes at the cost of reduced quality, which may be an issue when using external loudspeakers or headphones.Fortunately, you can optionally load better sounds if you need higher sound quality.

You might also be interested in my virtual guitarthat plays all the major chords, minor chords, and dominant sevenths chords. In fact, it can play any chords at all.But more importantly, the notes on the fretboard are visualized on a separate virtual piano keyboard which serves to explain how the guitar worksto those who already understand the piano.

I have the ambition to make it the most useful virtual piano online simulator in the world so I need to know what exactly my users expect when they play it.Please feel free to write any comments and remarks by using the email address displayed on theApronus.com homepage.

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.

 Metronome The Metronome feature enables you to play at a regular tempo. Use it to improve your timing.

You can adjust the Metronome based on BPM (beats per minute) or time signature.

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.

All rights reserved is a phrase that originated in copyright law as a formal requirement for copyright notice. It indicates that the copyright holder reserves, or holds for their own use, all the rights provided by copyright law, such as distribution, performance, and creation of derivative works that is, they have not waived any such right.

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.



The Keyboard panel allows you to input notes using a piano keyboard layout, and displays selected notes and sounding notes in playback as depressed keys with blue dots. It is located in the lower zone at the bottom of the window in Write mode.

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.

What would you consider to be more "playable"? Please ignore the rest of the picture, I just used the app screenshot for demonstration. Also, do you think it is ok to place the black keys like that? Could you work with that?

EDIT: I now played with both layouts for a couple of minutes and actually I got on with them way better than I thought. However, I now found another way to switch octaves (which is what I needed the space for) and will go for the "original" layout

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.

Below are pix of what I see when I select the Piano Keyboard and the Computer Keyboard from the Virtual Controllers menu. Do you have them listed in the views menu (see below)? If so, I am not sure why nothing happens when you select either of them.

UPDATE: I don't think that's it. I switched from "All" to other options and I could still add them. I was able to create a Lens that doesn't have "Virtual Controllers" under "Views," but it sounds like you have them listed. Also, I created a Track Control called "NONE" (no nothing!) and the Virtual Controllers still show up.

Update: I found it also worked for me by opening a --blank project--, adding a midi track, and pointing the track to "Virtual Controller" in the track itself (pointed to the MS GM Synth). Not sure why its not coming up for you. Maybe others have suggestions to things to try. 152ee80cbc

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