piano bar

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

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piano bar (plural piano bars)

  1. A drinking establishment featuring, as an enticement to customers, a musician playing a piano or similar keyboard-based instrument.
    • 1968, Joan Didion, Slouching Towards Bethlehem: Essays, page 224:
      "Where'd you learn to play the piano?" the drunk asks. "I got two degrees," the piano player says. "One in musical education." I go to a coin telephone and call a friend in New York. "Where are you?" he says. "In a piano bar in Encino," I say.
    • 1987, Barbara Beery et al., The Bar Off Melrose: A New Comedy, page 15:
      DOUG. Yeah, well this ain't a piano bar.
      BETTY. (indicating piano) Then what is that over there?
      DOUG. This is a bar with a piano. That's not the same thing as a piano bar, believe me.
    • 1989, G. Tullock, The Economics of Special Privilege and Rent Seeking, page 13:
      In the later days of the regulations one of the transcontinental airlines actually had a piano bar on its flights.