Unlike many household items, a piano is not designed for short-term use. Acoustic pianos, in particular, are built to last decades when properly maintained. This longevity changes how ownership should be approached.
Selecting a piano involves more than choosing a brand or size. A piano must work with the physical space and daily rhythms of the home. Room size, ceiling height, flooring, and wall placement all influence how a piano sounds and feels.
Buying a first piano can feel overwhelming. Brand names, sizes, finishes, and opinions often compete for attention, making it hard to know what truly matters. In reality, the most important factors are far simpler than many buyers expect.
For many modern pianists, the musical journey begins with a digital piano. Digital instruments are accessible, affordable, and practical, especially for beginners who are testing the waters or families navigating space and volume concerns. Starting digitally is not a compromise—it’s often a smart and realistic choice.
For many pianists—beginner, intermediate or advanced—the holiday season brings a mix of joy and pressure: guests come, schedules shift, practice time can drop. But with a little intentionality, you can use this period as a springboard rather than a pitfall.
When it comes to selecting, caring for, or upgrading a piano, brand heritage and construction quality play a huge role. Here we take a look at two major names in the field: Yamaha and Hailun.
There’s a subtle shift that happens in homes as we move from the rich tones of autumn into the sparkle of December. Your piano space doesn’t have to stay static—it can evolve with the season.
As December approaches and the holiday calendar fills up with performances, guests, and perhaps family making music, it’s the perfect time to give your piano a little attention.
As the leaves settle and we move into November, many of us begin the transition from everyday routines into holiday-anticipation. For those of us with a piano in the home, the instrument isn’t just furniture—it becomes a part of the family narrative.
Every four years, Warsaw becomes the luminous heart of the classical piano world. The International Chopin Competition is more than a contest — it’s a global ritual of artistry and endurance. For pianists, it is the Mount Everest of performance; for listeners, it is two weeks of breathtaking musical devotion.
But while the audience follows the fate of each pianist, another drama unfolds behind the music — a quieter rivalry that has nothing to do with interpretation or emotion, and everything to do with sound.
Because in Warsaw, the pianists are not the only ones competing. The pianos themselves are.
One of the most exciting shifts in the piano world right now is the rise of battery-powered, portable pianos. Instruments like Roland’s GO:PIANO88 show that full-sized keybeds, high-quality sound engines, and wireless operation can coexist. Roland
Across the U.S., piano sales have taken a nosedive. A recent CBS News article reported that in 2024, only 17,294 pianos were sold — compared to hundreds of thousands in past decades. CBS News The reason isn’t lack of interest in music; it’s economics, cultural change, and preference shifts. Young people are renting, using digital subscriptions, or choosing digital pianos as introductory tools.