In this Sunday, Sept. 25, 2016 photo Scott Frazer, of Medford, Mass., plays a piano on the sidewalk in the Harvard Square neighborhood of Cambridge, Mass. A number of working pianos painted by local artists have been placed around Boston and Cambridge, each with a simple message to passersby: "Play Me, I'm Yours." (AP Photo/Steven Senne)Steven Senne
In this Sunday, Sept. 25, 2016 photo Scott Frazer, of Medford, Mass., plays a piano on the sidewalk in the Harvard Square neighborhood of Cambridge, Mass. A number of working pianos painted by local artists have been placed around Boston and Cambridge, each with a simple message to passersby: "Play Me, I'm Yours." (AP Photo/Steven Senne)Steven Senne

Bostonians are embracing the painted pianos that have popped up across the city and neighboring Cambridge last week.

Celebrity Series of Boston placed 60 upright pianos decorated by local artists around the city. Each instrument bears a simple message: โ€œPlay Me, Iโ€™m Yours.โ€

And play residents and visitors have.

At historic Faneuil Hallโ€™s Quincy Market food hall Tuesday, a group of high school students from Boston took turns singing and playing Adeleโ€™s โ€œHelloโ€ and other pop tunes while the tourist-heavy, lunchtime crowd largely went about their day.

A few short blocks away, near a carousel along a grassy linear park, Somerville resident Zoรซ Madonna found a bit more solitude to play Joni Mitchellโ€™s โ€œRiverโ€ and later โ€œYour Hand in Mineโ€ by the Texas band Explosions in the Sky.

โ€œIt sounds pretty good,โ€ said the 23-year old accordionist for a local band playing contra dance music. โ€œThere are a few sticky keys and you canโ€™t really get a lot of sound out of it, but itโ€™s not as out of tune as itโ€™s going to be in a few days.โ€

The pianos, which will be available until Oct. 10, are part of a public art project by British artist Luke Jerram thatโ€™s been installed in 50 cities worldwide, including London, Hong Kong, Sao Paulo, Munich, New York and Los Angeles.

The installation last came to Boston in 2013, and more than 500,000 people used them that year, organizers said.

Gary Dunning, president of Celebrity Series Boston, hopes the installation helps spread the โ€œjoy of live performanceโ€ and shows people that โ€œthe arts are for everyone and that all people should have the opportunity to participate.โ€

The pianos have been placed in all of Bostonโ€™s 23 neighborhoods and around some of the regionโ€™s most recognizable landmarks, from Harvard Square to the Boston Library and the gold-domed Massachusetts State House. At Fenway Park, a portrait of retiring Red Sox slugger David Ortiz graces a green-painted piano.

Locations for the pianos, as well as videos and photos people have shared from their performances are on the web at streetpianos.com/boston2016.

Among the video clips is Chinese piano virtuoso Lang Lang doing a rendition of George Gershwinโ€™s Prelude No. 3 by the reflecting pool of the Christian Science church on Friday.

Members of the Boston Ballet also played music from their season opener โ€“ Le Corsaire โ€“ on Tuesday afternoon near the cityโ€™s famed Common.

โ€œEvery time I see these things out, Iโ€™m amazed at the condition theyโ€™re in,โ€ said Boston resident Cliff Sawyer, as he casually tapped out a melody on a piano in the busy retail district of Downtown Crossing. โ€œHate to say it, but some people just like to destroy stuff. Itโ€™s just the way it is.โ€