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The QMGPiano and Keyboard Music Note Full Set Stickers are a set of 88 transparent and removable stickers designed for all keyboard types. Made in the USA, these durable stickers feature a long-lasting adhesive that won't damage your keys, making learning music notes easier and faster.
S**B
5 Stars
These piano keyboard music notes that stick on the keys are a game changer! They’re incredibly helpful for learning and practicing, especially for beginners. The adhesive is strong but doesn’t leave any residue when removed, and they stay in place well during use. The notes are clear and easy to read, making it much easier to memorize scales and chords. I highly recommend these for anyone learning piano or looking for a helpful practice tool!
D**H
The product is excellent. Note notation is archaic & needs to go away.
I purchased this to put on a Yamaha 88 key electric piano for one reason only. To play & commit to muscle memory Sonata quasi una Fantasia ("The Moonlight) - L. van Beethoven Op 27 No2. The problem is the treble clef (not even sure I spelled 'clef' correctly that's how I feel about music theory in general). In order to play this song the notes played with the right hand are further down the treble clef than what is on the stickers so I wasted my money but that's on me. I don't blame the stickers. I am fed up with reading sheet music. It makes sense for brass instruments where numbers cannot be used however a piano is a keyboard. Look at your computer's keyboard. Now imagine instead of seeing a "K" on the "K" key you saw a circle located somewhere on a series of vertical lines. That doesn't make sense does it? Guitar players figured this out and hence guitar tab was born. A piano is a keyboard. Pianos should have LED back-lighting like some of our keyboards or laser etched numbers. We have the technology! You don't need to number the black keys, just the white ones.When I was a child I thought and did as a child. When I was instructed to learn how to read sheet music I did exactly that. It was probably about 3 days into not being able to play due to a health issue my brain kicked that garbage to the curb. But what about sight reading? OMG how are people going to sight read?Sigh... don't.Any song worth playing is worth committing to memory and if it remains worthy of playing your brain will store it in our protein based version of RAM. Music should not come from a sheet of paper. Music should come from the heart, the soul, the brain... okay it's the brain let's be honest here.But numbers, how would we write music?You'd write music as I write music... wait for it... with numbers. With these fancy computin' machines we have nowadays you can enter a number into a piece of software and magically both the number and the corresponding note appears. And they said unicorns didn't exist, pffft.Obviously this won't work for instruments like the sax or tuba. Obviously we'll still need to keep traditional music around for certain instruments but 88 = 88, 45 = 45, 74 = 74 etc is a superior method for learning piano, especially if you're like me & just want to play one song. What is printed on these stickers is archaic & not necessary for learning the piano. We just need software to correspond with the number system. It's only 1 through 88. This isn't rocket science. We also wouldn't need to store in our memory all the sharps and flats because 65 = 65, there's no ifs, ands or buts about it.Go get the patent. Code the software. Sell it. Cut me off a slice. That last part is the most important. Bring the piano into the 21st century & assist future generations in advancing faster than they could if they were burdened by learning how to read old sheet music. Stop wasting time training the eyes. Train the ears.Why not just learn to play the song by listening to it you say? That would have been a possibility years ago but I'm running on a single core these days. I'm going to need the piano equivalent of paint by numbers on this one.TLDR: Great product. Stickers were easy to apply. I wasn't shaking & sweating at all during the process. Did not help me accomplish my task.
J**R
Quite helpful piano key stickers
Quite a useful set of stickers one can apply to the actual piano keys themselves.They come with instructions on how to apply the stickers to a 49 or 61 or 76 or 88 key piano or synthesizer and a useful popsicle stick-like applicator. You get both stickers for the bass clef and treble clef.There are other stickers that come in various colors but I prefer the black stickers as they are not as obvious to the audience. They fit well onto the keys, very durable a nice black color easy to apply and remove and a good value.
B**E
Would recommend
Nice. I’d give 4.5 stars. One of the sheet didn’t have the stickers punctured all the way through so I had to cut them up with scissors. PIA but I like them. The instructions were good.
N**O
These are exactly what I wanted
Bought these for me and my daughter to learn the piano a bit better. They are understandably a bit tedious to apply but honestly not too terrible.Wipe all your keys with alcohol and a lint free cloth or paper towel first. Use the wooden mini popsicle stick. It is about the width of the inside of the white keys and the black keys. Start with Middle C. Place the bottom third or so of the sticker gently on the stick. Make it as straight and as evenly in the middle as you can. Place the stick flat on the key and line the sides of the stick up with the sides of the key, then hold the stick down firmly (hard enough to press the key down). Then take another finger and firmly press on the top of the sticker and gently peel the stick out from under the sticker and press the sticker the rest of the way down.I saw one user say they used masking tape to keep their stickers straight, which sounds like a good idea that I was too lazy to try. Instead, I used the 5 lines of the staff to eyeball it, and I'm perfectly happy with the results. Keep in mind that you will have to adjust for the amount the sticker goes down since it's hinging over the popsicle stick. Just line it up a hair over where it should be and when you press down it should line up fine.It is a bit of a confusing perspective when you see the bass staff over the treble staff where they meet, but if you look at both pics, you can see why it's like that as the bottom end of the bass section is so much lower than the staff, and likewise for the top end of the treble. So as long as people keep that in mind, they shouldn't have any problems
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 day ago