Friday
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Piano #43: John Paul Jones Park in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. The piano was a little on the quiet side. |
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Verrazano-Narrows Bridge in the background. |
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Wider shot of the gazebo. |
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Piano #44: Shore Road Park. I had to wait a little while to play the piano, and by the time I could take a picture sitting at the piano, the piano buddy had already closed the lid. Sigh. Oh well. At least, the piano sounded good, and I got to talk to some nice people here. |
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After I played, a woman recommended that I check out the fancy homes along Shore Park Road, so that's just what I did... |
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After viewing the homes, I passed by the piano again, and it was already locked and covered. |
Saturday
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The ceiling of the gazebo at Prospect Park - Grand Army Plaza. |
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Piano #45: Prospect Park - Grand Army Plaza. This piano is from Philadelphia. It had a lovely sound. The one trouble I had was looking at sheet music. I tried placing it on top of the piano, but I couldn't see, so I placed my sheet music on my backpack. (Instead of a portable bench, the seating area in the gazebo served as the "piano bench.") A young girl and her mother listened to me play, and when I finished, the little girl smiled at me and babbled. I asked her if she wanted to play the piano, but the mother said she was thanking me for playing. So I happily told the little girl, 'Thank you for listening!" |
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This piano is called This Too Shall Pass. I played "Arithmetic," "The Sound of White," and "Grow Old With Me." |
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Piano #46: Fort Greene Park at Myrtle Avenue. I actually passed another piano in Fort Greene Park, but someone was playing it, and it was out of tune. I didn't want my record-breaking piano to be that out of tune. Luckily, there was another close by, and nobody was playing it when I arrived. When I lifted the piano's tarp and looked at the artwork, I loved the painting. Beautifully done! |
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Four keys on the piano weren't working properly, but the sound/tune was decent. I played "Arithmetic," of course, followed by "Gravity." Yikes, wrong choice. I messed up near the end, so it couldn't be my finale song. I then played "Where I Stood." Only time I've played it during the 2011 Pop-Up Pianos. It was my last song of the day and 15-day pianothon. Though I considered visiting more pianos, even just to listen, I made the executive decision to head home and rest. Running around New York City is exhausting. Seriously exhausting. But for pianos? Worth it. |
Pop-Up Pianos Summary
1) Played all 33 Manhattan pianos.
2) Set new personal record for pianos played: 46.
3) Played at least one piano in each borough.
- The Bronx: 1 piano
- Brooklyn: 6 pianos
- Manhattan: 33 pianos
- Queens: 3 pianos
- Staten Island: 3 pianos