Mini Piano in parallel world Edo old Tokyo
2021 -

Japanese furniture-style piano design in an industry-academia collaboration with the Design Department of Chiba University.

Project Overview

What if there were a world in which the piano evolved independently in Japan during the Edo period (1603–1868)? What would that piano look like today?
We created a dreamlike piano that evolved in that universe in a distinctly Japanese manner in the part of Edo where the commoners lived and worked.

Since 2021, Yamaha Design Laboratory has been conducting joint research with the Design Department of Chiba University’s Faculty of Engineering. This project is part of that industry-academia collaboration, and its theme is the evolution of a distinctly Japanese piano. They say the piano was introduced to Japan near the end of the Edo period, around the time when Yamaha founder Torakusu Yamaha was born. Pianos essentially look the same today as they did then; we have manufactured European-style pianos for all these years.
This project is a thought experiment on the question of what the piano would look like today if Yamaha and the piano had existed during Japan’s period of isolation, and the piano had evolved in the context of Edo lifestyles. Although the work is based on what would have happened in a fictional world, it is the result of in-depth research conducted with students of the Design Department of Chiba University. What these activities revealed was the wisdom and culture of life in the part of Edo where the commoners lived richly with limited resources. We were also reminded that our emphasis on cultural sustainability is rooted in environmental sustainability. Although there is much interest these days in specific steps toward achieving the SDGs, here we present our findings on sustainability from a different angle: the cultural perspective.

Production cooperation: Miyabiandon Seisakusho / Manaka-Mokkosho Inc. / Sogei, Inc.

Works