Could make it perfect just by shaving some material off, it’s missing the appropriate gaps between E and F, and B and C
72 0 ReplyCame here just to note this. So close!
15 0 ReplyI was just going to say "That's not right."
You were so much kinder and more helpful. Which is why you're you and I'm me.
10 1 ReplyYeah but it would make the job much more complicated as very few would know and care about it to do it right.
3 0 Reply
- C
- C#
- D
- D#
- E
- E𝄲
- F
- F#
- G
- G#
- A
- A#
- B
- B𝄲
- C
- C#
- D
- Mystery note
- C
- C#
- ...
65 0 ReplyAmazing that you can tell. They all look the same to me.
12 1 ReplyLol their joke is that the layout doesn't actually match a piano. Normally there are seven white keys and five black keys. So E# isn't a thing, that's just F. And B# isn't a thing, that's C.
31 0 ReplyIt's astonishingly obvious once it's pointed out:
There's no B#/Cb and no E#/Fb, so the groups of two black notes are between C and E, and the groups of three are between F and B.
14 0 Reply
Blue note support!
2 0 ReplyJacob Collier ahh piano
2 0 Reply
Westminster bridge also makes shadows. https://i2-prod.mylondon.news/incoming/article18813054.ece/ALTERNATES/s1200b/0_Shadow_on_Westminster_Bridge-1.jpg
32 0 Replythey knew
4 0 Reply
The layout differing from a typical piano bugs me though.
20 0 ReplyI think we are looking at one of them new fangled microtonal keyboards. The white keys are your standard 12 TET notes (C, C#, D, D#, etc.) and the black keys are your half sharps / half flats.
Slaps roof you could fit so much math music in this bad boy.
17 0 Reply5 0 Reply
The piano for when dodecaphony doesn't subvert tonality nearly enough.
12 0 ReplyNow play chopsticks like Tom Hanks in Big.
7 0 ReplyPut some motion sensors on that thing and rig it so I can play chopsticks with my feet.
6 0 ReplyAnd then add a light so cats can scare the shit out of passersby with eerie dissonance in the dead of night.
7 0 Reply
Is that baked enamel?
2 0 Reply