Electric Pianos
For considerably less money than you shell out for an acoustic keyboard, also known as a piano, you can own a digital keyboard capable of sounding like just about any other instrument on the planet (including an acoustic keyboard).
Instead of vibrating strings to make sounds, most keyboards of the electronic variety produce sound by one of the following ways:
These sounds are then amplified, sending vibrations to your eardrum and thus causing you to hear the sound.
Synthesizers
Like bakers, dancers, and burglars, synthesizers derive their name from the work they perform — they synthesize sound. First they use an oscillator to generate sound waves electronically. Then, in the synthesis part, they alter the shape, frequency, and volume of the sound waves and combine them to create different sounds. Synthesizers can create goofy hums and buzzes as well as imitate virtually any instrument imaginable. A programmable synthesizer, commonly known in hip music-industry lingo as a synth, lets the programmer (that’s you) shape and modify the sound waves with buttons, knobs, switches, and sliders. You can make your synthesizer sound like the entire Vienna Philharmonic is in your living room!
Digital keyboards
Digital keyboards work with sampled sounds. Sampled sounds are made by digitally recording discrete audio samples of an instrument (or any other sound) and storing them in the brain of the keyboard. When you choose a sound on the keyboard’s display panel and press a key on a digital keyboard, you access the sampled sound and through amplification play the digital information out into the audible realm.
As you can imagine, the quality of digital sound depends on the quality of the sample, and this is one of the features that distinguish the many digital keyboards. Depending on the model and price, digital keyboards come with a variety of features to simulate the experience of playing a real piano or organ. They also help you to augment the experience with lots of other fun options, like recording and editing your own playing, accessing other instrument sounds at the touch of a button, and connecting to other keyboards or your computer.
Many digital keyboards feature a bonus auto-accompaniment feature. With the push of a single button, you can have a nonstop-always-on-the-beat drum and bass line accompanying you. (Bossa nova, anyone?)
Perhaps the biggest downside of a digital keyboard is the sound and touch compared to an acoustic piano. Some digital keyboards don’t respond to your touch no matter how fast or slowly you press a key; Touch-sensitive keyboards produce louder or softer sounds depending on the speed of your touch. A keyboard with weighted keys is closest in feel to an acoustic piano.
Given their ability to put realistic samples of other instruments at your fingertips, digital keyboards are the next generation of the synthesizer.

Piano Glossary
accidental
A sharp or flat not in the key signature.

Piano Glossary
bar line
A line that divides music into measures, breaking up the musical paragraph into smaller, measurable groups of notes and rests.

Piano Glossary
bass clef
A musical symbol that indicates lower the notes, generally played with the left hand.

Piano Glossary
beat
The steady pulse of a piece of music; what you tap your foot to.

Piano Glossary
C position
Placing your right-hand thumb on middle C and your other right-hand fingers on the four successive white keys.

Piano Glossary
chord
Three or more notes played at the same time.

Piano Glossary
Circle of Fifths
An order that starts with no sharps and flats and cycles the ring of keys to all 12 keys.

Piano Glossary
clef
A musical symbol that tells you the names of the lines and spaces on the staff.

Piano Glossary
fingerings
Numbers written above the notes that tell you which finger to use for each note.

Piano Glossary
G position
Placing your right hand on the G above middle C and your other right-hand fingers on the four successive white keys.

Piano Glossary
grand piano
The largest piano. A concert grand is 9 feet long; a baby grand is about 5 feet.

Piano Glossary
grand staff
The treble clef and bass clef joined together with a brace at the start of the left side.

Piano Glossary
home note
The base note of a piece of music. All the notes in a song have a relation to the home note based on how close or far they are to home.

Piano Glossary
interval
The distance between any two musical notes.

Piano Glossary
key
A set of notes that corresponds to a certain scale.

Piano Glossary
key signature
Notation placed just after the clef on every line of music to tell the performer what key the song is in.

Piano Glossary
ledger line
An imaginary line running above or below the staff, extending the five-line staff to represent notes above and below the staff.

Piano Glossary
measure or bar
A batch of notes with a specific number of beats — most commonly four beats — that helps a performer keep time.

Piano Glossary
middle C
The 40th key of a piano, close to the center of the keyboard. The first key a new pianist learns the placement of.

Piano Glossary
MIDI Musical Instrument Digital Interface
A device that allows communication between electronic, digital equipment.

Piano Glossary
notehead
The printed representation of a note. A notehead is oval and may be solid or open, an attached to a stem or not.

Piano Glossary
octave line or ottava line
The line that tells you to play the indicated note or notes an octave higher or lower than written.

Piano Glossary
root note
The lowest note of a chord.

Piano Glossary
scale
A series of notes in a specific, consecutive order.

Piano Glossary
staff
The five lines and four spaces music is written on.

Piano Glossary
tempo
How fast or slow the beat is.

Piano Glossary
time signature
The indication of the meter of a piece of music.

Piano Glossary
tonic
The bottom note of a scale.

Piano Glossary
treble clef
A musical symbol that indicates higher the notes, generally played with the right hand.

Piano Glossary
triplet
Three notes per beat.

Piano Glossary
upright piano
A piano that sits upright against a wall. Also called verticals, they vary in height from the spinet up to full-size uprights.