I don't like sitting at a keyboard.

Error, no keyboard. Press F1 to continue.

I love playing. The keyboard is my journal.

I'm a bit of a gunner on the QWERTY keyboard.

I am not a keyboard person. The mouse is better.

I play the keyboard, piano - I like making beats.

I played djembe, percussion, keyboards and I sang.

I wish we hadn't used all the keys on the keyboard.

I would like to play with electronic keyboards again.

Just moving one keyboard or synth is a pain in the ass.

A mouse and a keyboard is not a good performance instrument.

Keep your head in the clouds and your hands on the keyboard.

I'm kind of a one-note at a time, one finger keyboard player.

So, I really don't consider myself a fabulous keyboard player.

But I find that the keyboard is the complete instrument you know?

I can play just about any keyboard but I can't read or write a note.

That it's a lot harder to make a keyboard sound not-cheesy than a guitar.

The Geezer album, Black Science, had a lot of keyboards and it did not work.

My people, we stay indoors. We have keyboards. We have darkness. It's quiet.

I tend not to write on guitar very often. I tend to start off with keyboards.

I detest flying anywhere. Left to my own devices, I'd never leave my keyboard.

You just can't be good in bed anymore. You have to be good at the keyboard too.

It's been very hard for the guitar as a serious synthesizer to compete with keyboards.

Sometimes I just hit the keyboard in a way I'd like the rhythm of the tracks to sound.

Writing is not just the technical act of your fingers on the keyboard. Writing is living.

When I'm online, I'm alone in a room, tapping on a keyboard, staring at a cathode-ray tube.

Everyone wants to be an "expert" on social media and share their opinion behind the keyboard.

Dark forces dragged me away from the keyboard, swirling forces of irresistible intensity and power.

Mozart encompasses the entire domain of musical creation, but I've got only the keyboard in my poor head.

The most exciting mobile trend is full Qwerty keyboards. I'm sorry, it really is. I'm not making this up.

You treat the air as a canvas and the paint is the chords that come through your fingers, out of the keyboard.

I like producing beats, and I like rapping, too. I have a program for the PC, and I can hook my keyboard to it.

I do love using keyboards and I love writing keyboard parts, but I am not a player in the true sense of the word.

I've always been a bit wary of keyboards because there's an invisibility to it - you're not really hitting anything.

I can play every instrument there is, every horn, I've played all the saxes and trumpets and everything and keyboards.

Life is too sweet and too short to express our affection with just our thumbs. Touch is meant for more than a keyboard.

Whoever came up with "hold the shift key for eight seconds to turn on 'your keyboard is buggered' mode" should be shot.

There is nothing like having your hands on a keyboard. Or an acoustic piano. Those are the things you can't really replace.

I drink tea pretty much continuously at a rate of around 1 imperial pint/hour, which sort of enforces screen/keyboard breaks.

I spent ten years playing classical piano, and that was what led to keyboards and eventually to production and to Linkin Park.

About 70 percent of everything is really sketched out on my keyboard beforehand, because I do want accidents to happen in the studio.

Sit me at the keyboard of any computer in the world with access to the Internet, and in just 24 hours I’ll earn at least $24,000 in cash.

It is horrible to sit in front of the keyboard and write those scenes because you're losing too. You lose somebody you enjoy working with.

One of the saddest sights to me has always been a human at a keyboard doing something by hand that could be automated. It's sad but hilarious.

I definitely feel that my brain works differently, and words come out differently, if I have a pencil in my hand, rather than if I have a keyboard.

It should be possible, in a 'debreviation' mode, to type 'clr' on the keyboard and have 'The Council on Library Resources, Inc.' appear on the display.

With the help of modern technology, I can compose intricate keyboard parts and then I have to go back and learn them in order to perform them properly.

I'm not a natural story-teller. Put a keyboard in front of me and I'm fine, but stand me up in front of an audience and I'm actually quite shy and reserved.

I can't even tolerate my own playing on electric keyboards. It's not about the musical ideas - the sound itself is toxic. It's like eating plastic broccoli.

There’s nothing more humbling than seeing your best quotes in a list, and thinking they could have been written by a coma patient with a keyboard and spasms.

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