Crossword clues for pianos
pianos
- What John and Joel play
- Virginal relatives
- Uprights, e.g
- They typically sit near conductors at concerts
- They may be dueling
- They may be "dueling" in bars
- They have lots of hammers
- They have 88 keys
- Steinways, e.g
- Stage filler for a "monster concert"
- Spinets, e.g
- Spinets and baby grands
- Spinet and grand
- Sometimes they're dueling
- Some uprights
- Some are upright
- Popular concerto instruments
- Places for key plays
- Nightclub instruments
- Knabe products
- Key players' needs
- Keepers of the keys?
- John and Joel play them
- Items for players on the bench?
- Instruments with keyboards
- Instruments with hammers
- Instruments in "The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T"
- Harpsichords' cousins
- Grand or upright instruments
- Grand array, maybe
- Elton plays these
- Concerto instruments
- Concert grands
- Bösendorfer products
- Benched players use them
- Benched player's spots?
- Bar duelers, at times
- Baldwins or Heintzmans
- Baby grand and others
- 'Grand' instruments
- Some bar features
- Bench sites
- Grand and baby grand
- "Grand" things
- Roll players?
- Key holders
- Yamaha products
- They had rolls to play, once
- Things bench players need?
- Noted challenges for movers
- Challenges for movers
- Upright and grand
- What Joel and Nero play
- Instruments for the Serkins
- What players on the bench need?
- Spinets, e.g.
- These have keys
- Grands, e.g
- Grand instruments
- Instruments with pedals
- Uprights and grands
- Instruments for Ax and Watts
- Old saloon sights
- Baby grands, e.g
- Instruments for Ian's op set out
- Keyboard instruments
- Parlor pieces
- Musical instruments
- They may be grand
- Their players are often benched
- They may be surrounded at parties
- Van Cliburn Competition need
- Steinway wares
- Steinway products
- Steinway output
- Organs' kin
- Ivory keyboards
- Honky-tonk sights
- Bar duelers, sometimes
Wiktionary
n. (plural of piano English)
Wikipedia
Pianos is a two-story bar/restaurant/live music venue in the Lower East Side section of Manhattan at 158 Ludlow Street. Its stage attracts local and national alternative rock groups as well as DJs, though a more typical performance consists of smaller name local and touring acts.
Pianos follows the example of Arlene's Grocery by keeping the "Pianos" name and sign from the store that previously existed there when it was conceivable that a piano store might make it on the Lower East Side. Pianos has two stages: one that has upstairs in a funky loungelike setting, and one in a back room off the main floor.
Seth Kugel of The New York Times praised Pianos' menu as "surprisingly respectable", likening it to bar food that has been subjected to a transformation on Extreme Makeover. Kugel singled out the red wine burger encrusted in black pepper, and fried mozzarella served with roasted basil tomato.
Usage examples of "pianos".
Start back with these three wait, two pianos, first the enemy Flaubert asked to be liberated from.
Left behind: mounds of bones, mass graves, card files, flagpoles, party books, love letters, homes, church pews, and pianos difficult to transport.
All are eager to start out fresh with living, saving, letter writing, in church pews, at pianos, in card files and homes of their own.