An unusual surprise was offered to the “Titanic Museum” at Pigeon Ford, Tennessee, when a 10-year-old visitor was allowed to play the ancient piano. The ensuing events are difficult to believe.

As the boy settles in to play the baby grand piano, a tour guide dressed in a sailor suit stands nearby.
‘Ladies and gentlemen, give it up for Logan,’ the tour leader adds. Logan tips his neon cap to the people surrounding him, who clap in response.
Nuvole Bianche, which translates to ‘White Clouds’ in Italian, is one of modern composer Ludovico Einaudi’s most well-known compositions, and that is what he starts to play.

He is surrounded by a throng of people who smile and take pictures of him with their phones. He plays
the piano with grace and fluidity on both ends. When he concludes the moving song, the audience applauds.
Logan has a beautiful skill, and the tour guide says that even at the age of ten, he is already among the best players he has ever heard. He discusses Logan’s gift with the parents and bystanders.

With 400 pre-discovery relics spread across 20 exhibits, the Tennessee-based ‘Titanic Museum’ is the
largest permanent Titanic museum worldwide. One of the five Steinways on the ship is replicated in the piano.
Midway through March of that year, five Steinway pianos were brought on board for the amusement of first and second class passengers, having been acquired from the Hamburg plant.
Though none of these pianos were salvaged from the Titanic, each time someone visits the museum and plays, their design is preserved.