Photos: AI-assisted piano allows disabled musicians to perform Beethoven

'Anybody's Piano' tracks the notes of the music and augments the performance

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Tokyo: Inside the wood-panelled auditorium of one of Tokyo's most prestigious concert halls, 24-year-old Kiwa Usami (centre) presses just one index finger to the piano and summons the colossal swells of Beethoven's Ode to Joy, accompanied by an orchestra and choir.
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Usami, who has cerebral palsy, was one of three musicians with disabilities performing Symphony No. 9 with the Yokohama Sinfonietta at Suntory Hall on Thursday using an artificial intelligence-powered piano.
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To assist players, the "Anybody's Piano" tracks the notes of the music and augments the performance by adding whatever keys are needed but not pressed.
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Usami, who started playing piano while in elementary school, helped inspire the AI programme. Her dedication to practising with one finger prompted her teachers to work with Japanese music giant Yamaha.
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The result of their collaboration was a revised version of Yamaha's auto-playing piano, which was released in 2015. The Christmas performance was the first such concert. "It's a really powerful experience to play with an orchestra," 10-year-old Yurina Furukawa told AFP after a rehearsal.
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The "Anybody's Piano" allowed Furukawa, who has a rare muscle condition called congenital myopathy and requires breathing assistance, to perform from a bed stationed in front of the grand piano.
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Keeping rhythm by moving her left arm, she powerfully pressed the keys with the back of her right hand, with the AI-assisted piano filling in the notes to complete the performance.
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Unlike more traditional auto-play, the "Anybody's Piano" stops if a player hits the wrong notes. "When I miss a key or slow down, I feel the pressure from the piano to go on and press the right key," said performer Hiroko Higashino, 39.
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Higashino, who was born with three fingers on her right hand, only began learning to play piano after the "Anybody's Symphony No. 9" concert programme was announced.
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"If the piano helps me and adds two missing keys for me, I can more faithfully recreate the rich harmony, the music that Beethoven intended to express," she said.
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Members of the 130-person audience described the Christmas performance as uplifting. "I haven't had such a heart-trembling experience like this for a long time," said Teruko Imai, a concertgoer in her 60s. "It was the best Christmas present for me."
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Another attendee, Koki Kato, 16, said she was "so touched". "The piano makes it possible for anybody to perform, which is a very good thing for music too."

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