Play in your browser with real acoustic piano samples, keyboard shortcuts, adjustable note labels, sustain, and nine alternate instrument voices. No download, no sign-up.
Every piano key is mapped to a key on your computer keyboard. The QWERTY row plays the middle octave, the number row handles the first set of sharps, and ASDF / ZXCV extend the range upward.
Switch between grand piano, electric piano, harpsichord, pipe organ, strings, choir, synth pad, music box, and more. Each voice uses real recorded samples rather than synthesis.
Display labels as English letters (C, D, E), French solfège (Do, Ré, Mi), or German notation (where B flat is B and B natural is H). Useful for learners across musical traditions.
Click any key to play it. Hold the mouse button and drag across the keyboard to play a glissando, just like running your finger along real piano keys.
Each piano key shows the computer key that plays it. Press that key on your keyboard to trigger the note. Hold multiple keys at once for chords.
On phones and tablets, tap the keys directly. The piano supports multi-touch, so you can play chords with several fingers at the same time.
A virtual piano is useful whenever you do not have access to a real instrument. It lets you check a melody you have in your head, work out a chord from a song, get familiar with the layout of a keyboard before buying one, or practise a passage you are learning while travelling.
This piano uses recorded samples rather than synthetic tones. Each note is a real recording from an acoustic piano or the corresponding instrument, so the sound remains musical across the full range of the keyboard.
If you are learning music theory, the adjustable note labels can help you internalise the names of the notes in the system you work with. Switch to solfège for French-language conservatory training, or to German notation if you are reading historical scores from composers like Bach or Mozart.
Once you can play notes, the next step is to recognise them by ear. PitchFit is built for exactly that.
Can you name a note without a reference tone? Find out in under 10 minutes.
Take the test βMeasure how accurately you hear the distance between two notes, the skill underlying playing by ear.
Take the test βSing back what you hear. A free interactive game that scores your pitch accuracy in real time.
Play βTrain your ear and hear music the way musicians do.