We are at the point monumental scientific, technological and intellectual changes. The post Mechancial Age presents particular challenges for historically focused cultural pursuits deeply rooted in the mechano-crafts of antiquity. Electricity is central to most contemporary technological operations and the vast majority of music related experiences uses electricity as its energy source.366
Unique pianistic techniques and musical concepts of jazz keyboard playing and composition have emerged as a result of the extensive use of electronics.
Any sound I hear in my head I can reproduce with a synthesizer, and this is the greatest blessing, I hear a sound and work with that sound. Not from the aspect of virtuosity , not how fast or slow, but what sort of music you can create from that sound. It’s like a dream world.367
Stuart Piano Sound Influenced by Electronic Sound.
In my jazz improvisations on the Stuart piano I have frequently experienced elements in the Stuart sound that exhibit the stability of electronic enhancement. In the sound excerpt below I play the Stuart piano in an improvised passage of Black368 by Duke Ellington. Ellington composed this music to depict the musical changes of African-American people as their world transformed from slavery and work song to emancipation and the subsequent creation of the contemporary art form, jazz369 . Black was composed in 1943 in the height of the big band swing era for the Ellington Orchestra’s big band sound. Its original swing metre in 4 has been modified for a more contemporary 21st century ‘world music’ metre of 6.
366Wayne Stuart speaks in 12 “Innovations In The Piano,” 2010. (edited by W. Stuart, 1/2/2016).
367 Brian Glasser, In A Silent Way : A Portrait Of Joe Zawinul, (U.K: Sanctuary Publishing ,2001), 241.
368Duke Ellington Black Brown and Biege Iving Mills,New York, 1943.
369‘Jazz’ is frequently described as America’s classical music, a description which emphasizes its blending of African and European musical forms. Billy Taylor, “Jazz: America’s Classical Music,”Black Music PerspectivesVol. 14, No.1, Special Issue: Black American Music Symposium 1985 (Winter, 1986) : 21-25.