The only instrument I know how to really play, and the instrument that I absolutely love, is the piano. I have been playing piano ever since I have been 9.
I normally write on acoustic guitar, although piano is the instrument that I actually studied. Occasionally, I'll write on the piano or sometimes with no instrument at all.
For me, the keyboard is always an additional sound to the piano. Piano is the main instrument; I can't go anywhere without acoustic piano. It's been my best friend since I was 6 years old.
I feel like piano is my main instrument. I'm most comfortable on the piano.
I've written lots of songs on the piano. My mother had a piano and it was the first instrument I played
I've written lots of songs on the piano. My mother had a piano and it was the first instrument I played.
The piano is the closest instrument to me in my life, so it's just natural to play my pieces on the piano.
In the piano, one has the instrument complete before he begins; but in the case of the voice, the instrument has to be developed by study.
Piano was my first instrument, but it wasn't the instrument that I showed the most proficiency on.
Once I started playing the piano, after my first small competition, I realized that the piano was the right instrument for me.
The piano is a universal instrument. If you start there, learn your theory and how to read, you can go on to any other instrument.
The only instrument I can play is piano. Whenever I make songs at home, I play the piano and make them on the piano.
My first instrument is piano, I play some piano and guitar. So my solo music is more like real singer/songwriter type stuff.
When I first picked up an instrument, nothing really happened. I played piano when I was a little kid. I hated it so much, I actually don't play piano now.
It is only by demanding the impossible of the piano that you can obtain from it all that is possible. For the psychologist this means that imagination and desire are ahead of the possible reality. A deaf Beethoven created for the piano sounds never heard before and thus predetermined the development of the piano for several decades to come. The composer's creative spirit imposes on the piano rules to which it gradually conforms. That is the history of the instrument's development. I don't know of any case where the reverse occurred.
For the piano and me it is always a blind date! I meet different pianos every single day. I can't take my piano with me like a bassist can take his instrument. So whenever I arrive I am a bit nervous to see what kind of piano is waiting for me.