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Home Keyboards & MIDI Pianos

Pianos

(812 Items)
Sale
Williams Symphony Grand II Digital Micro Grand Piano With...
5.0 of 5 stars (5)
Product Price  $1,699.99
$2,499.99
Or $35.42/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
$1,495.99
Sale
Yamaha P-125ABLB Digital Piano With Wooden Stand and Bench
5.0 of 5 stars (1)
Product Price  $699.99
$819.99
Or $14.59/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha Clavinova CLP-795GP Digital Grand Piano With Bench
5.0 of 5 stars (13)
from  Product Price  $7,299.99
Or $152.09/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
Yamaha P-45 88-Key Weighted-Action Digital Piano
5.0 of 5 stars (24)
Product Price  $399.99
48-Month Financing*
Nord Stage 4 88-Key Keyboard
5.0 of 5 stars (3)
Product Price  $5,699.00
Or $118.73/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
Sale
Williams Allegro IV In-Home Pack Digital Piano With Stand,...
0 of 5 stars
Product Price  $499.99
$699.99
Or $10.42/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha Clavinova CLP-785 Console Digital Piano With Bench
5.0 of 5 stars (7)
from  Product Price  $5,499.99
Or $114.59/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
Sale
Williams Legato IV 88-Key Digital Piano With Bluetooth &...
0 of 5 stars
Product Price  $249.99
$349.99
Sale
Williams Symphony Concert Digital Grand With Touchscreen...
5.0 of 5 stars (1)
Product Price  $2,399.99
$3,199.99
Or $50.00/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha DGX-670 88-Key Portable Grand
4.5 of 5 stars (83)
Product Price  $849.99
Or $17.71/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Nord Electro 6D Digital Piano
5.0 of 5 stars (4)
from  Product Price  $2,699.00
Or $56.23/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
Sale
Williams Allegro IV 88-Key Digital Piano With Bluetooth and...
5.0 of 5 stars (3)
Product Price  $349.99
$499.99
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha Clavinova CVP-809 Console Digital Piano With Bench
5.0 of 5 stars (2)
from  Product Price  $12,799.99
Or $266.67/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Roland RP107 Digital Console Piano With Bench
0 of 5 stars
Product Price  $1,199.99
Or $25.00/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Nord Stage 4 Compact 73-Key Keyboard
5.0 of 5 stars (3)
Product Price  $4,899.00
Or $102.07/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
$4,311.12
Sale
Williams Overture III Digital Piano
4.0 of 5 stars (3)
from  Product Price  $799.99
$1,099.99
Or $16.67/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Roland RD-2000 EX Digital Stage Piano
0 of 5 stars
Product Price  $2,599.99
Or $54.17/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha Clavinova CLP-765GP Digital Grand Piano With Bench
5.0 of 5 stars (8)
from  Product Price  $5,199.99
Or $108.34/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
Sale
Williams Rhapsody III Digital Piano With Bluetooth
5.0 of 5 stars (2)
from  Product Price  $499.99
$649.99
Or $10.42/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha Clavinova CLP-875 Console Digital Piano With Bench
0 of 5 stars
from  Product Price  $4,999.99
Or $104.17/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha Clavinova CLP-845 Console Digital Piano With Bench
0 of 5 stars
from  Product Price  $3,799.99
Or $79.17/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
Sale
Roland F701 Digital Console Home Piano
0 of 5 stars
Product Price  $1,299.99
$1,499.99
Or $27.09/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
$1,143.99
Sale
Yamaha P-225 88-Key Digital Piano
0 of 5 stars
from  Product Price  $649.99
$699.99
Or $13.55/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Casio Privia PX-S7000 88-Key Digital Piano
5.0 of 5 stars (3)
from  Product Price  $2,499.00
Or $52.07/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
$2,199.12
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha Clavinova CLP-885 Console Digital Piano
0 of 5 stars
from  Product Price  $6,399.99
Or $133.34/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Casio GP-510BP Celviano Grand Hybrid
0 of 5 stars
Product Price  $6,299.00
Or $131.23/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Williams Symphony Grand Digital Piano With Bench
4.0 of 5 stars (26)
Product Price  $1,699.99
Or $35.42/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
$1,359.99
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha Clavinova CLP-835 Console Digital Piano With Bench
0 of 5 stars
from  Product Price  $2,899.99
Or $60.42/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Nord Stage 4 73-Key Keyboard
5.0 of 5 stars (1)
Product Price  $5,399.00
Or $112.48/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
Sale
Nord Grand Stage Piano
5.0 of 5 stars (1)
Product Price  $3,499.99
$4,099.00
Or $72.92/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha YC73 73-Key Organ Stage Keyboard
3.5 of 5 stars (4)
Product Price  $2,599.99
Or $54.17/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha P-525 88-Key Digital Piano
5.0 of 5 stars (8)
Product Price  $1,599.99
Or $33.34/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Roland FP-90X 88-Key Digital Piano
5.0 of 5 stars (1)
Product Price  $2,059.99
Or $42.92/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Nord Piano 5 88-Key Stage Keyboard
2.0 of 5 stars (1)
Product Price  $3,499.00
Or $72.90/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha Clavinova CSP-275 Digital Console Piano With Bench
0 of 5 stars
from  Product Price  $5,199.99
Or $108.34/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Roland MP200 88-Key Digital Upright Piano With Stand and...
0 of 5 stars
Product Price  $2,059.99
Or $42.92/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
$1,812.79
Sale
Yamaha Arius YDP-184 Traditional Console Digital Piano With...
5.0 of 5 stars (6)
Product Price  $1,999.99
$2,399.99
Or $41.67/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
$1,599.99
48-Month Financing*
Kawai CA401 Digital Console Piano With Bench
0 of 5 stars
Product Price  $3,099.00
Or $64.57/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha Clavinova CSP-255 Digital Console Piano With Bench
5.0 of 5 stars (1)
from  Product Price  $3,799.99
Or $79.17/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
48-Month Financing*
Yamaha Clavinova CVP701 Home Digital Piano
4.0 of 5 stars (2)
from  Product Price  $4,299.99
Or $89.59/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details

King of All Instruments, the Piano

The grand piano is a complex instrument. Some have more than 7,000 parts, many of which are moving parts. There is incredible tension in its strings. The interaction of a piano’s woods, glues and other components is a science unto itself. Because of its logical, visual nature, the piano has always occupied a special place in music. It is the beating heart of much of the world’s composition and musical understanding.

There are two categories of modern pianos: acoustic and digital. Acoustic piano keys trigger a hammer that contacts a piano wire. This makes it both a string and percussion instrument. Digital piano technology improved vastly over recent years. Piano sampling and acoustic-like keyboard feel helped digital pianos become more popular. There’s a vast, affordable selection of lighter weight digital pianos available. And they never go out of tune.

History of Pianos

In 1700, Italian musician Bartolomeo Cristofori got the idea to replace the plucking mechanism in the harpsichord with a hammer mechanism. Music hasn’t been the same since. The big difference was not only the character of the sound produced. It was also the increased dynamic range of the instrument. At last, a keyboard instrument could rival brass, woodwind and string instruments in terms of expression. Because of this increase in dynamic capacity, it earned the name pianoforte. Dynamic capacity is the ability to play both piano (soft) and forte (loud).

Keyboard instruments existed well before the development of the pianoforte. Depending on how you define what a piano is, Cristofori could be the modern piano’s inventor. It’s possible the piano’s real defining feature piano is the hammer striking a string. It appeared on the dulcimer, a middle-eastern instrument that emerged two thousand years ago. But, the player’s hand triggered the dulcimer’s hammers directly. As such, dulcimers seem at first glance not to have much in common with the piano. But, the tone-generating principle is the same.

The Pianoforte’s Predecessors and Successors

One of the first keyboard instruments was the clavichord. Its handicap was its lack of volume. Ironically, it had one of the chief features of the pianoforte: dynamics. A depressed key triggered the clavichord’s brass strip, which struck a pair of strings. Musicians knew little about sounding boards at the time. So, its loudness issue sent musicians with an inventive streak scrambling for improvements in that area.

The virginal, the spinet and the harpsichord all followed. Each sought to improve upon various aspects of their predecessors. The virginal introduced a plucking mechanism as opposed to a primitive hammer mechanism. This achieved a more usable volume. The spinet added more keys. The harpsichord’s longer strings afforded still more keys along with a few control elements. The Cristofore design was based on and then eclipsed the harpsichord with multiple hammer mechanisms triggered from keys. He would improve this mechanism several times in the three decades that would remain in his life after his initial momentous design.

The 18th century was a time of change in orchestral music, with tremendous advances in metallurgy, engineering and woodworking. New and better flutes, reeds and mouthpiece instruments became increasingly available, and the piano developed accordingly. Originally a 60-key instrument, it was soon expanded to 85, and then finally to its current 88 keys as the acoustic properties of cabinets and sounding boards improved alongside the strength of the internal hardware.

By the 19th century, cast-iron frames, action that supported rapid restrikes and enhanced tuning stability helped extend the piano’s popularity and power. It soon became a symbol of success and sophistication to have a piano in one’s house. After meals or during get-togethers, the piano room, or parlor, was the family’s gathering place for socializing.

The modern grand piano evolved from all of this, adding elements like cross-stringing, which achieves a greater tone richness by passing more strings over the sound board’s resonant center. Mechanical action improvements came in recent decades, as well as overall improvements in gluing, string manufacturing and understanding of wood properties.

All That Jazz (Pianos)

In the 20th century, the piano became the centerpiece of jazz music. Whether played on rickety upright pianos in barroom settings or on nine-foot grand pianos on concert stages, jazz music’s great composers and players coaxed new sounds out of this more than 300-year-old instrument. Duke Ellington, Thelonius Monk and Dave Brubeck were the Bach, Mozart and Beethoven of their respective times. They, along with dozens of other prominent jazz composers, redefined what a piano was capable of.

Advanced technical proficiency was likewise no longer the sole province of classical pianists. Musicians like Art Tatum, Oscar Peterson and others proved that extreme mastery of the piano was as much a part of jazz music as it was classical music. Modern greats of jazz piano include Brad Meldau, Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, David Garfield and of course, many others.

The Modern Grand Piano, and What Piano Pedals Do

The grand piano of today is an 88-key instrument that spans seven and a third octaves, from A0 to C8. Depressing a piano key causes a hammer to strike the string. Its force corresponds to how hard the player strikes the key. But that’s not all it does. It also lifts a damper off the corresponding string. When you release the key, the damper reengages and damps that note. This brings us to the function of the three pedals.

The most common is the sustain pedal or damper pedal. It is the rightmost of the three. Depressing the damper pedal performs the same action as pressing down a single key, only it lifts the damping mechanism off of all of the keys. The piano is a resonant instrument. Its vibrations constantly influence its many strings. Engaging the damper pedal results in a more fluid and full sound, and also affords interesting effects with arpeggiations.

The leftmost pedal is the soft pedal. The next time you are near a grand piano, depress the soft pedal and watch the keyboard. The entire key bed shifts so the hammers strike fewer strings, which lends a softer sound. The center pedal is the sostenuto pedal. It disengages the dampers selectively. Play a chord or a note, then depress the sostenuto pedal. Those notes will continue to ring out until releasing the sostenuto pedal.