What exactly is a piano?

celesta (Italian: Celesta) is a body-sounding instrument, similar in appearance to an upright piano, invented by Mustel, France, with a pure and mellow bass; The midrange is crisp and bright; The treble area is sharper. The most famous works using the piano are Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy in Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker and Mozart's opera The Magic Flute. Playing a musical instrument. Percussion instruments for orchestras and wind bands. Percussion instruments used in European orchestras. The shape is like a small reed organ, and the sound source body is a metal strip. When playing, the hammer connected to the keyboard strikes a string of tuned steel bars. Under each steel bar, a horn is attached to amplify the volume and make the timbre clear and pure. Use the pedal-controlled damper to control the length of the sound. The range of the piano is 4 or 5 octaves from the center C to the top of the center C, and the musical notation is 1 octave lower than the actual sound. The piano was invented in 1886 by A. Mustel, originally called the tuning fork piano. In 1886, it was officially named the piano. In fact, the sound bar and sound tube are all made of aluminum. It was first used by Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky in the dance of the little candy fairy in the ballet Nutcracker. Later, the piano plays an important role in music for stringed instruments, percussion instruments and piano by B. Bartok.

basic introduction: the original name of celestamustel(cle.);.); Mustel: it is the name of French musical instrument company; Celesta means the voice of the sky. The piano was invented by mustel victer in Paris, France. His son (mustel, August) applied for a patent and officially owned this instrument. The original pronunciation used a series of tuning forks, also known as the steel fork. In 1886, it was officially named as the piano. In fact, the sound bars and horns of the piano are all made of aluminum. Originally, it was a proprietary product, but at present, the patent right has disappeared, so an instrument with a low and even range has begun to appear.