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{{Otheruses4|keyboards on musical instruments|instruments referred to as "keyboards"|Keyboard instrument}}

[[Image:Klaviatur-3-en.svg|300px|thumb|right|The layout of a typical three octave musical keyboard]]
[[Image:Musical Keyboard.jpg|thumb|right|A '''musical keyboard'''.]]
A '''musical keyboard''' is the set of adjacent depressible levers on a [[musical instrument]] which cause the instrument to produce sounds.

Keyboards almost all share the common layout shown. [[Musical instrument]]s with keyboards of this type include the [[piano]], [[harpsichord]], [[clavichord]], [[organ (music)|organ]], [[electric piano]], [[digital piano]], [[synthesizer]], [[Electronic keyboard|"arranger keyboard" or "home keyboard"]] (also called "[[electronic keyboard]]"), [[celesta]], [[dulcitone]], [[accordion]], [[melodica]], [[glasschord]], and [[carillon]]. Since the most commonly encountered keyboard instrument is the piano, the keyboard layout is often called ''the piano keyboard''.

==Description==
[[Image:Clavecin flamand.png|thumb|Harpsichord with black keys for the C major scale]]
''The'' twelve notes of the Western [[musical scale]] are laid out with the lowest note on the left; the larger keys (for the seven "natural" notes of the C major [[scale (music)|scale]]: C, D, E, F, G, A, B) jut forward. Because these keys are often coloured white on a keyboard, these are often called the ''white notes'' or ''white keys''. The keys for the remaining five notes which are not part of the C major scale (namely C♯/D♭, D♯/E♭, F♯/G♭, G♯/A♭, A♯/B♭) are set back. Because these keys are often coloured black, these notes are often called the ''black notes'' or ''black keys''. The pattern repeats at the interval of an [[octave]].

The arrangement of longer keys for C major with intervening, shorter keys for the intermediate semitones dates to the 15th century. Many keyboard instruments dating from before the nineteenth century have a keyboard with the colours of the keys reversed - darker coloured keys for the ''white notes'' and white keys for the ''black notes''. A few electric and electronic instruments have had this feature; Vox's electronic organs of the 1960s, Hohner's [[Clavinet]] L, one version of Korg's Poly-800 synthesizer and Roland's digital harpsichords. Some 1960s electronic organs used reverse colors or gray sharps or naturals to indicate the lower part(s) of a split keyboard. Farfisa's FAST series of portable organs had black, light gray and dark gray naturals and white sharps. It should be noted that the reverse-colored keys on [[Hammond organ]]s such as the B3, C3 and A100 are not playable keys; they physically latch when pressed like [[radio buttons]], and serve as selector switches for preset sounds. There are 21 white keys on the keyboard and 15 black.

==Size and historical variation==
[[Image:Roland Keyboard.jpg|thumb|left|250px|A [[Roland Corporation|Roland]] EXR-3 Arranger Keyboard]]
The chromatic compass of keyboard instruments has tended to increase. Harpsichords often extended over five octaves (61+ keys) in the 18th century, while most pianos manufactured since about 1870 have 88 keys. Some modern pianos have even more notes (a Bösendorfer 225 has 92 and a Bösendorfer 290 "Imperial" has 97 keys). Modern synthesizer keyboards commonly have either 61, 76 or 88 keys. Organs normally have 61 keys per manual, though some spinet models have 44 or 49. An organ [[Pedal keyboard|pedalboard]], a keyboard played by the organist's feet, may vary in size from 12 to 32 notes.

In a typical keyboard layout, ''black note'' keys have uniform width, and ''white note'' keys have uniform width and uniform spacing at the front of the keyboard. In the larger gaps between the ''black'' keys, the width of the natural notes C, D and E differ slightly from the width of keys F, G, A and B. This allows close to uniform spacing of 12 keys per octave while maintaining uniformity of 7 natural keys per octave. This scheme has the most uniform distribution, given fixed accidental key width, though not all keyboards are produced this way.

Over the last three hundred years, the octave span distance found on historical keyboard instruments (organs, virginals, clavichords, harpsichords, and pianos) has ranged from as little as 125mm to as much as 170mm. Modern piano keyboards ordinarily have an octave span of 164-165mm, but several reduced-size standards have been proposed and marketed, including a 15/16 size (152 mm octave span) and the 7/8 DS Standard (140 mm octave span) developed by Canadian composer, conductor and pianist [[Christopher Donison]] in the 1970s then further developed and now marketed by [[Steinbuhler & Company]], located in Titusville, Pennsylvania. U.S. pianist [[Hannah Reiman]] has promoted piano keyboards with narrower octave spans and has a U.S. patent (#6,020,549) on apparatus and methods for modifying existing pianos to provide interchangeable keyboards of different sizes.

There have been variations in the design of the keyboard to address technical and musical issues. For instance, during the sixteenth century, when instruments were often tuned in [[meantone temperament]], some harpsichords were constructed with the G♯ and E♭ keys split into two. One portion of the G♯ key operated a string tuned to G♯ and the other operated a string tuned to A♭, similarly one portion of the E♭ key operated a string tuned to E♭, the other portion operating a string tuned to D♯. This extended the flexibility of the harpsichord, enabling composers to write keyboard music calling for harmonies containing the so-called ''[[Wolf interval|wolf]]'' fifth G-sharp♭ to E-flat♯, but without producing discomfort in the listeners. Other examples of variations in keyboard design include the [[Janko keyboard]] and the chromatic keyboard systems on the [[accordion]] and [[bandoneón]].

==Playing techniques==
In spite of their apparent similarity, keyboard instruments of different types often require subtly different techniques. For instance, a piano will produce a louder note the harder the key is pressed. On the other hand the volume and timbre of the sound on the [[pipe organ]] are dictated by the flow of air from the bellows and the stops selected by the player; in the harpsichord the strings are plucked and the volume of the note is not perceptibly varied by using a different touch on the keyboard. Players of these instruments must use other techniques to colour the sound. The [[Electronic keyboard|arranger keyboard]] uses pre-set drum rhythms which respond to chords played in the left hand by the instrumentalist, with other buttons and switches used to change rhythms and even the voice of the instrument.

Playing a keyboard instrument can prove to be a challenging task; even though the layout is quite simple and all notes are easily accessible, some music puts high demand on the performer's skills to play accurately and in [[tempo]], and beginners will often struggle to produce a passable rendition of a simple piece due to [[wikt:technique|technique]] deficiency, which takes training to improve. The sequence of movements executed by the playing hand can be almost arbitrarily complicated, with some possible problems being wide-spanned [[chords]], which can be problematic for people with small hands, chords that require unusual hand positions which can initially be uncomfortable or even painful, and also fast [[scale_(music)|scales]], [[trill|trills]] and [[arpeggio|arpeggios]]. Playing instruments with dynamic keyboards (i.e. ones that respond to varying force with which the key is struck) may require independence of the fingers so that some fingers are able to strike harder while others play more softly etc. The other problem that can be daunting for aspiring keyboard players is coordinating two hands yet being able to control each one independently. Most non-trivial music is written for two hands, where often the right hand plays the [[melody]] in the [[Clef#The_treble_clef|treble]] range, while the left plays accompanying chords in the [[Clef#The_bass_clef|bass]] range. Some extremely challenging music is written for the left hand alone. It is required to play both the melody and accompaniment at the same time. Examples of this writing include many of [[Leopold_Godowsky|Godowsky's]] [[Studies_on_Chopin's_Etudes|53 Studies on Chopin's Etudes]] and [[Maurice_Ravel|Ravel's]] [[Piano_Concerto_for_the_Left_Hand_%28Ravel%29|Piano Concerto for the Left Hand]]. In music that utilizes [[counterpoint]] technique, both hands play different melodies at the same time. This two-hand coordination skill is (arguably, like most aspects of keyboard playing) not as much a matter of hand dexterity, as rather of the brain's ability to distinguish between two melodic lines, and ultimately execute and coordinate them in real-time, which takes some time to develop.

==Other uses==
Other instruments share the keyboard layout, although they are not keyboard instruments. For example the [[xylophone]], [[marimba]], [[vibraphone]] and [[glockenspiel]] all have a separate sounding tone bar for each note, and these bars are laid out in the same configuration as a common keyboard.

==Keyboards with alternate keys==
There are some rare variations of keyboards with more or less than 12 keys per octave, mostly used in [[microtonal music]].
[[Image:Microtonal_Keyboard_19_Tones.jpg|thumb|400px|[[19 scale]] [[microtonal]] keyboard]]

==References==
*{{cite book|title=A Guide to the Harpsichord|first=Ann|last=Bond|publisher=Amadeus Press|year=1997|id=ISBN 1-57467-063-8}}

==See also==
*[[Piano]]
*[[Keytar]]
*[[Janko keyboard]]
*[[Prophet 5]]
*[[Piano key frequencies]]

==External links==
*[http://www.keyboardmag.com/ Keyboard Magazine] - features selections from magazine, along with multimedia examples.
*[http://www.synthzone.com/ Synth Zone] - a link directory of keyboard and synthesizer resources.
*[http://www.synthtopia.com/ Electronic Keyboard News] - features news and reviews of keyboards, synthesizers and synth modules.
*[http://bapuli.reflectionsindia.org/piano.htm Click MusicalKeys] - free on-screen musical keyboard with 128 instruments.
*[http://keychord.com Keyboard Chords] - Chords for keyboards.
*[http://www.mathpages.com/home/kmath043.htm MathPages - Mathematical discussion of the distribution of the keys]
*[http://www.quiz-tree.com/Music_The-Keyboard_1_image.html Keyboard Quiz]
*[http://sankey.ws/action.html The Keyboard of a Harpsichord]

[[Category:Keyboard instruments]]

[[da:Klaviatur]]
[[de:Klaviatur]]
[[eo:Muzikila klavaro]]
[[es:Teclado (instrumento musical)]]
[[fr:Clavier (musique)]]
[[it:Tastiera (musica)]]
[[ja:鍵盤 (楽器)]]
[[nl:Manuaal]]
[[no:Klaviatur]]
[[pt:Teclado (música)]]
[[sl:Klaviatura]]
[[sv:Klaviatur]]
[[tr:Klavye (müzik)]]

Revision as of 10:34, 27 January 2008

The layout of a typical three octave musical keyboard
A musical keyboard.

A musical keyboard is the set of adjacent depressible levers on a musical instrument which cause the instrument to produce sounds.

Keyboards almost all share the common layout shown. Musical instruments with keyboards of this type include the piano, harpsichord, clavichord, organ, electric piano, digital piano, synthesizer, "arranger keyboard" or "home keyboard" (also called "electronic keyboard"), celesta, dulcitone, accordion, melodica, glasschord, and carillon. Since the most commonly encountered keyboard instrument is the piano, the keyboard layout is often called the piano keyboard.

Description

Harpsichord with black keys for the C major scale

The twelve notes of the Western musical scale are laid out with the lowest note on the left; the larger keys (for the seven "natural" notes of the C major scale: C, D, E, F, G, A, B) jut forward. Because these keys are often coloured white on a keyboard, these are often called the white notes or white keys. The keys for the remaining five notes which are not part of the C major scale (namely C♯/D♭, D♯/E♭, F♯/G♭, G♯/A♭, A♯/B♭) are set back. Because these keys are often coloured black, these notes are often called the black notes or black keys. The pattern repeats at the interval of an octave.

The arrangement of longer keys for C major with intervening, shorter keys for the intermediate semitones dates to the 15th century. Many keyboard instruments dating from before the nineteenth century have a keyboard with the colours of the keys reversed - darker coloured keys for the white notes and white keys for the black notes. A few electric and electronic instruments have had this feature; Vox's electronic organs of the 1960s, Hohner's Clavinet L, one version of Korg's Poly-800 synthesizer and Roland's digital harpsichords. Some 1960s electronic organs used reverse colors or gray sharps or naturals to indicate the lower part(s) of a split keyboard. Farfisa's FAST series of portable organs had black, light gray and dark gray naturals and white sharps. It should be noted that the reverse-colored keys on Hammond organs such as the B3, C3 and A100 are not playable keys; they physically latch when pressed like radio buttons, and serve as selector switches for preset sounds. There are 21 white keys on the keyboard and 15 black.

Size and historical variation

A Roland EXR-3 Arranger Keyboard

The chromatic compass of keyboard instruments has tended to increase. Harpsichords often extended over five octaves (61+ keys) in the 18th century, while most pianos manufactured since about 1870 have 88 keys. Some modern pianos have even more notes (a Bösendorfer 225 has 92 and a Bösendorfer 290 "Imperial" has 97 keys). Modern synthesizer keyboards commonly have either 61, 76 or 88 keys. Organs normally have 61 keys per manual, though some spinet models have 44 or 49. An organ pedalboard, a keyboard played by the organist's feet, may vary in size from 12 to 32 notes.

In a typical keyboard layout, black note keys have uniform width, and white note keys have uniform width and uniform spacing at the front of the keyboard. In the larger gaps between the black keys, the width of the natural notes C, D and E differ slightly from the width of keys F, G, A and B. This allows close to uniform spacing of 12 keys per octave while maintaining uniformity of 7 natural keys per octave. This scheme has the most uniform distribution, given fixed accidental key width, though not all keyboards are produced this way.

Over the last three hundred years, the octave span distance found on historical keyboard instruments (organs, virginals, clavichords, harpsichords, and pianos) has ranged from as little as 125mm to as much as 170mm. Modern piano keyboards ordinarily have an octave span of 164-165mm, but several reduced-size standards have been proposed and marketed, including a 15/16 size (152 mm octave span) and the 7/8 DS Standard (140 mm octave span) developed by Canadian composer, conductor and pianist Christopher Donison in the 1970s then further developed and now marketed by Steinbuhler & Company, located in Titusville, Pennsylvania. U.S. pianist Hannah Reiman has promoted piano keyboards with narrower octave spans and has a U.S. patent (#6,020,549) on apparatus and methods for modifying existing pianos to provide interchangeable keyboards of different sizes.

There have been variations in the design of the keyboard to address technical and musical issues. For instance, during the sixteenth century, when instruments were often tuned in meantone temperament, some harpsichords were constructed with the G♯ and E♭ keys split into two. One portion of the G♯ key operated a string tuned to G♯ and the other operated a string tuned to A♭, similarly one portion of the E♭ key operated a string tuned to E♭, the other portion operating a string tuned to D♯. This extended the flexibility of the harpsichord, enabling composers to write keyboard music calling for harmonies containing the so-called wolf fifth G-sharp♭ to E-flat♯, but without producing discomfort in the listeners. Other examples of variations in keyboard design include the Janko keyboard and the chromatic keyboard systems on the accordion and bandoneón.

Playing techniques

In spite of their apparent similarity, keyboard instruments of different types often require subtly different techniques. For instance, a piano will produce a louder note the harder the key is pressed. On the other hand the volume and timbre of the sound on the pipe organ are dictated by the flow of air from the bellows and the stops selected by the player; in the harpsichord the strings are plucked and the volume of the note is not perceptibly varied by using a different touch on the keyboard. Players of these instruments must use other techniques to colour the sound. The arranger keyboard uses pre-set drum rhythms which respond to chords played in the left hand by the instrumentalist, with other buttons and switches used to change rhythms and even the voice of the instrument.

Playing a keyboard instrument can prove to be a challenging task; even though the layout is quite simple and all notes are easily accessible, some music puts high demand on the performer's skills to play accurately and in tempo, and beginners will often struggle to produce a passable rendition of a simple piece due to technique deficiency, which takes training to improve. The sequence of movements executed by the playing hand can be almost arbitrarily complicated, with some possible problems being wide-spanned chords, which can be problematic for people with small hands, chords that require unusual hand positions which can initially be uncomfortable or even painful, and also fast scales, trills and arpeggios. Playing instruments with dynamic keyboards (i.e. ones that respond to varying force with which the key is struck) may require independence of the fingers so that some fingers are able to strike harder while others play more softly etc. The other problem that can be daunting for aspiring keyboard players is coordinating two hands yet being able to control each one independently. Most non-trivial music is written for two hands, where often the right hand plays the melody in the treble range, while the left plays accompanying chords in the bass range. Some extremely challenging music is written for the left hand alone. It is required to play both the melody and accompaniment at the same time. Examples of this writing include many of Godowsky's 53 Studies on Chopin's Etudes and Ravel's Piano Concerto for the Left Hand. In music that utilizes counterpoint technique, both hands play different melodies at the same time. This two-hand coordination skill is (arguably, like most aspects of keyboard playing) not as much a matter of hand dexterity, as rather of the brain's ability to distinguish between two melodic lines, and ultimately execute and coordinate them in real-time, which takes some time to develop.

Other uses

Other instruments share the keyboard layout, although they are not keyboard instruments. For example the xylophone, marimba, vibraphone and glockenspiel all have a separate sounding tone bar for each note, and these bars are laid out in the same configuration as a common keyboard.

Keyboards with alternate keys

There are some rare variations of keyboards with more or less than 12 keys per octave, mostly used in microtonal music.

19 scale microtonal keyboard

References

  • Bond, Ann (1997). A Guide to the Harpsichord. Amadeus Press. ISBN 1-57467-063-8.

See also