What's Up in Music (AI)
DJ Rob O. Tics
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Welcome to our podcast series that explores the exciting fusion of artificial intelligence and music technology. In each episode, we delve into how AI revolutionises the music industry, from creation and production to distribution and live performances. Two "droids" in an animated weekly discussion.
Episode
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How AI Is Reshaping Music in 2026: Innovation, Copyright Battles, and the Human Edge 30.05.2026 49mntAI is moving from novelty to infrastructureThe music world is no longer treating AI as a fringe experiment. Tools for generative audio, remixing, co-production, workflow assistance, and trend prediction are becoming part of the everyday machinery of music creation and discovery.Legal and ethical pressure is intensifyingA major thread running through these stories is the battle over copyright, training data, and artist consent. Labels, indie artists, and platforms are all pushing for clearer rules around how AI systems are trained and how synthetic music is labeled and distributed.Transparency is becoming essentialAs AI-generated tracks become harder to distinguish from human-made music, the industry is responding with disclosure labels, detection tools, and new norms around provenance. The goal is not just compliance, but preserving trust between artists, platforms, and listeners.Real-time and adaptive music is arrivingThe sources point to a new era of interactive audio, where music can be generated or modified live in response to data, environments, or user behavior. That shifts AI from a studio-only tool into something that can shape performance, games, and immersive media in the moment.The future looks collaborative, not fully automatedThe strongest takeaway is that AI is acting more like a co-producer than a total replacement. The opportunity is real, but so is the need to protect the rights, identity, and emotional core that human musicians bring.This audio blog paints 2026 as a turning point: AI is rapidly becoming woven into music production and discovery, but the real battle is about how to keep creativity, ownership, and human meaning intact while the tools get more powerful.
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The Empathy Factor 17.05.2026 52mntThe "Ontological Shock" of AI MusicThe central theme of the podcast is the "ontological shock" currently disrupting the music world. Rather than a slow, manageable evolution, the industry is experiencing a sheer vertical line of disruption. The market for generative AI and stem separation tools has seen a mind-bending 651% revenue surge in just three years.Suno's Dominance: Suno has become the absolute titan of text-to-song generation. It boasts a nearly $5 billion valuation backed by over 100 million users. The platform controls a staggering 90.4% of the commercial AI music market.Udio's Collapse: Competitor Udio serves as a cautionary tale, with its market share dropping to less than 1% in Q1 of 2026. This collapse happened because they temporarily disabled the ability to download .wav and .mp3 files during licensing negotiations, effectively locking their users out of their own workflows.Corporate Integration: Major labels, such as Warner Music Group (WMG), have chosen integration over litigation. They are actively partnering with AI platforms to create authorized, licensed models trained on their stars' voices, creating new revenue streams like personalized birthday songs.Stem Separation: Instead of releasing raw AI tracks, professional producers are using AI as a starting point. They use advanced stem separation algorithms to isolate the best parts of an AI generation, like a catchy vocal hook.Refining the Sound: Producers then drag these isolated stems into traditional Digital Audio Workstations (DAWs) like Ableton or Pro Tools. They build the rest of the track around the AI hook using real instruments and traditional mixing techniques to eliminate the "muddy" or "crunchy" AI sound.The Copyright Loophole: This hybrid method is also used as a legal shield. Purely machine-generated music cannot be legally copyrighted under US guidelines. By surrounding an AI stem with human composition and arrangement, producers meet the legal threshold for human authorship, allowing them to claim ownership and royalties.The Photography Analogy: The hosts compare this to the 19th-century invention of photography. Just as traditional painters panicked but eventually adapted by physically painting over photographs to disguise the mechanical origins, modern producers are layering human audio over machine-generated tracks.Human Connection: Despite the technological leaps, a massive consumer backlash is brewing. The data reveals a quantifiable consumer discomfort with purely AI-generated music.The Empathy Factor: Younger demographics, particularly Gen Z and Gen Alpha, are leading a "listener rebellion". Audiences are experiencing severe content fatigue and are seeking out music that represents a shared human struggle, something a machine inherently lacks.Project LYDIA: AI isn't just staying in the studio; it has moved to live performances. The podcast highlights "Project LYDIA," a neural sampling stompbox.Real-Time Processing: This stage pedal contains a dedicated neural processing chip that analyzes and transforms a live audio signal—like a piano or guitar—in real-time, allowing performers to synthesize entirely new acoustic textures on the fly.The hosts ultimately leave the listener pondering a profound philosophical question regarding the "effort heuristic": If an AI can instantly generate a mathematically perfect, tear-jerking ballad, does the song actually matter to us if we know no human tears were shed to create it?The Tech Giants and the FallenThe Hybrid "DAW" WorkflowThe "Listener Rebellion"AI on the Live Stage
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The Effort Heuristic: Why We Fear the "Soulless" Machine in Music 04.05.2026 41mntThe intersection of AI and music in 2026 is defined by a slippery reality: intense philosophical debate crashing into massive commercial and practical shifts. *The Photography Parallel: Reevaluating the "Soul" of AudioJust as the camera sparked outrage in the 19th century, generative AI challenges the "effort heuristic"—the ingrained belief that artistic value demands manual, time-consuming labor. Critics dismiss machine-generated audio as "soulless," echoing historical fears that mechanization destroys artistic intention. We break down what it really means to create when the machine handles the execution.The $333M Gold Rush: Market Dominance & Walled GardensThe creator economy is undergoing a rapid financial shift. AI music tools have seen a staggering 651% revenue surge since 2023, hitting $333 million. We analyze the current landscape: why Suno commands an overwhelming 90.4% of the commercial AI market, and how Udio's market share collapsed below 1% after restricting downloads—proving that AI tools must integrate with, not dictate, established industry workflows. The New Sampling: Hybrid DAW WorkflowsBehind closed doors, veteran producers aren't using AI to replace themselves; they’re using it to eliminate creative friction. Moving past fully generated "push-button" tracks, the industry is treating AI as the next evolution of sampling. Producers are generating raw stems and initial concepts, then pulling them into their Digital Audio Workstations for rigorous arrangement, processing, and mixing. AI is no longer a replacement threat—it’s an integrated instrument that allows artists to retain ultimate creative control.
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The New Soundscape 27.04.2026 33mntIs the "human touch" still the most valuable currency in music?In this episode, we dive deep into the state of the music industry in April 2026. The "Wild West" era of AI is over, replaced by a sophisticated ecosystem of ethical integration, legal boundaries, and "walled gardens." We explore how the world’s biggest players—from Universal Music Group to Spotify—are navigating a world where professional-grade production has become a commodity, but human identity remains a scarcity.In this episode, we discuss:Guardians of the Voice: How UMG’s "Personal Value Filters" allow artists to mathematically block their AI twins from endorsing things they hate (like a vegetarian artist blocking a burger ad).The Legal Battlefield: Why the recent court ruling against Udio is a massive win for copyright holders and the future of training data.Follow the Money: How Splice and Deezer are solving the attribution problem to ensure human creators—not just bots—get paid.The Identity Economy: Why technical perfection is now "cheap" and why the human story is the only thing left that can't be automated.Chart-Topping Algorithms: The rise of IngaRose, the AI persona that hit #1 on iTunes, and what it means for the future of "celebrity."Whether you’re a creator worried about your royalties or a tech enthusiast looking for the next frontier of "social remixing," this episode is your roadmap to the future of sound."In an era of unlimited audio production, the only true source of value is the human story."Listen now to hear how the industry is balancing human heart with digital smarts.
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The Sadie Winters Paradox 24.08.2025 16mntAI-Generated Song "Sadie Winters" Becomes Unintended Hit, Sparking Debate on CreativityA recent experiment by YouTuber and music producer Rick Beato on a "CBS Saturday Morning" segment, intended to demonstrate the ease and potential pitfalls of AI-generated music, has backfired in an unexpected way. The fictitious AI-created artist, "Sadie Winters," and her song, "Walking Away," have become a viral sensation, earning widespread praise for their quality and emotional resonance, and raising profound questions about the future of music and artistry.The segment, which aired in mid-August 2025, featured Beato using a combination of AI tools to create a song from scratch in a matter of minutes. He used ChatGPT to generate the persona of "Sadie Winters," a 23-year-old singer-songwriter from Nebraska, and to write the lyrics for a song about heartbreak. He then fed these lyrics into the AI music generator Suno, which produced the complete song, "Walking Away."The likely intention of the program was to showcase how simple it has become to create potentially generic and soulless music, posing a threat to human musicians. However, the public reaction was the opposite of what might have been expected. Once the song was uploaded to YouTube and discussed on social media, it quickly gained traction, with an overwhelmingly positive response.Comments on YouTube and TikTok have been filled with praise for the song's catchy melody, the emotive quality of the AI-generated vocals, and the relatable lyrics. Many listeners expressed that they found the song genuinely moving and superior to much of the human-created pop music on the charts. The comments section of the official "Sadie Winters" YouTube channel has become a forum for a larger discussion about the nature of art, with many users questioning whether the origin of a song matters if it connects with the listener on an emotional level.This unexpected outcome has thrown fuel on the fire of the ongoing debate about AI in the creative arts. Critics of the experiment point out that while the song is pleasant, it is still derivative, drawing on a vast database of existing music. They argue that true artistry lies in human experience and innovation, which AI can only mimic, not genuinely possess.However, the "Sadie Winters" phenomenon demonstrates a growing public acceptance of AI-generated content, provided it meets a certain quality threshold. It also highlights a potential shift in the music industry, where AI could become a powerful tool for songwriting, production, and even the creation of virtual artists. The case of "Sadie Winters" serves as a compelling counter-narrative to the idea that AI music is inherently "useless" or "simple," proving that it can create content that resonates with a wide audience, whether by design or by accident.
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The Unwinnable War 10.08.2025 28mntThe first front in the music industry’s war against AI isn’t in the studio or on streaming platforms. It’s in the courtroom. Major rights holders, led by the RIAA, have filed lawsuits against generative music platforms like Suno and Udio, accusing them of “willful copyright infringement at an almost unimaginable scale.” The claim is straightforward: these systems train on vast libraries of copyrighted music without permission, and the resulting AI-generated tracks compete directly with human works. But the foundation for this legal push is far less stable than it might appear.At the heart of the battle is the U.S. doctrine of fair use, a complex and often ambiguous legal concept meant to strike a balance between creative freedom and the protection of original works. AI developers argue that training on existing songs is “transformative,” not copying, but learning patterns in much the same way a human artist absorbs influences over a lifetime. They frame it as teaching a machine the grammar of music, enabling it to create something new. Rights holders counter that the process consumes entire compositions and that the outputs, even if novel, risk saturating the market, reducing licensing opportunities, and eroding the commercial value of human-made music.The courts themselves are far from unified. In Andy Warhol Foundation v. Goldsmith, the U.S. Supreme Court narrowed the scope of what counts as “transformative” use, bolstering the argument that AI-generated works may serve the same commercial purpose as the originals. Yet other rulings have taken the opposite view, describing the use of copyrighted material in AI training as “quintessentially transformative.” The U.S. Copyright Office has added nuance but little clarity, noting that transformativeness is “a matter of degree” and questioning whether the analogy between AI learning and human learning is as straightforward as some claim.This patchwork of legal interpretations leaves no clear path forward. Even if the RIAA scores a courtroom victory, the reality is that open-source AI models and decentralized development make the technology nearly impossible to contain. Once released, these models can be shared, modified, and deployed by anyone, anywhere, operating beyond the practical reach of most legal remedies. It’s the same dynamic the industry faced with Napster: shutting down a single company doesn’t stop the spread of the underlying capability.For musicians, this uncertainty is more than just an abstract legal puzzle; it’s deeply personal. Our songs aren’t just content; they’re fragments of our lives and identities. The instinct to protect them is natural. But the blunt instrument of litigation may not be capable of stopping a technology that is already in the wild and evolving at breakneck speed. History shows that the law can slow technological change but rarely reverses it. As with past innovations, from digital sampling to peer-to-peer file sharing, the eventual outcome may be adaptation, not prohibition.In the broader story of AI and music, this legal labyrinth is just one of several forces shaping an inevitable future. The real question may not be whether AI music can be stopped, but how artists, industry, and technology will learn to coexist in a creative landscape that refuses to stand still.
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AI Music on Streaming: Conflict, Policies, and Future 02.08.2025 22mntThe rise of generative AI is profoundly disrupting the global music industry, creating a complex and fragmented landscape across major streaming platforms. At its core, this conflict pits the AI industry's view of public data as a training resource against the music industry's principle of intellectual property as private, licensable assets.Here's a brief overview of this rapidly evolving landscape:Divergent Platform Strategies: Major streaming services (DSPs) like Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, Amazon Music, and Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) have adopted vastly different approaches to AI music.Spotify is pragmatic, leveraging AI for discovery and personalisation, while reactively policing impersonation.Apple Music is cautious and curated, slowly introducing AI features and likely developing a licensed ecosystem with labels.YouTube has built a comprehensive regulatory framework with mandatory disclosure and Content ID to manage AI content, aiming for transparency.Amazon Music is aggressively integrating controversial third-party AI tools like Suno to normalise generative AI for consumers.Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) is developing a sovereign, "walled garden" ecosystem in China, creating its own AI tools and a direct pipeline to its services, thereby internalising the technology and mitigating legal risks.United Rightsholder Opposition: In contrast to fragmented platform strategies, major labels and performing rights organisations are presenting a unified, aggressive opposition. They are executing a coordinated legal and legislative strategy, reminiscent of their response to file-sharing, to force generative AI into a controlled, licensed framework. They argue that unlicensed ingestion of copyrighted works for AI training constitutes copyright infringement and reject the "fair use" defence.Emerging Monetisation and Systemic Fraud: While AI-native artists have shown market viability, achieving significant listeners on Spotify, this success is overshadowed by AI's role as an accelerant for sophisticated streaming fraud, siphoning an estimated £1 billion or more annually from the industry's royalty pool. This creates a vicious cycle where market saturation from low-cost AI content and fraud diminish economic prospects for legitimate human artists.Legal and Ethical Crux: Core legal debates revolve around whether AI-generated works meet the human authorship requirement for copyright, the application of "fair use" to AI training data, and the protection of an artist's voice and likeness through publicity rights. Ethically, concerns include the pervasive lack of transparency and consent in AI model training, potential bias, and the broader devaluation of human artistry due to economic displacement.Ultimately, the current state of conflict is unsustainable. The future is projected to be defined by an inevitable synthesis, involving the development of new licensing models for AI training, novel royalty distribution frameworks, and the deployment of advanced technologies like blockchain for transparent rights management. Navigating this transition requires stakeholders to embrace both aggressive rights protection and proactive engagement in shaping the ethical and commercial standards of this new, algorithmically-driven music economy.
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AI Artist Signs Major Label Deal 26.07.2025 13mntThe Imoliver Deal: A New Beat for the Music Industry?On July 24, 2025, the music world witnessed a landmark event: Hallwood Media, a traditional full-service record label, signed a comprehensive recording agreement with Imoliver. What makes this deal revolutionary? Imoliver is explicitly described as a "human creator" who crafts songs "using nothing but lyrics and AI tools" from the generative AI platform Suno. This isn't just a distribution deal for a viral track; it’s a full-spectrum partnership covering artist management, production, global distribution, and marketing, mirroring traditional artist development.Who is Imoliver? The "AI Music Designer"Imoliver, identified as Oliver McCann, is lauded not for traditional musical prowess but for his "prompt engineering, curation, aesthetic guidance, and taste-making". His breakout single, "Stone," amassed over 3.2 million streams on Suno before the deal, showcasing his ability to consistently generate appealing music across diverse genres. The deal strategically rebrands him as a "music designer," shifting focus from the AI tool to his human skill and artistic vision.Hallwood Media's Vision: Embracing DisruptionFounded by industry veteran Neil Jacobson (formerly of Geffen Records), Hallwood Media positions itself as an "independent artist accelerator label" keenly focused on the intersection of music, technology, and new asset classes. This deal is a calculated move, seeing the ability to effectively guide powerful AI tools as a "new, valuable, and acquirable asset class". It effectively inverts the traditional A&R model, allowing Hallwood to invest in market-tested creations with lower overhead, tapping into an efficient new talent pipeline.Navigating the Legal LandscapeThe deal operates amidst a "legal maelstrom". U.S. copyright law insists on "human authorship," often deeming AI-generated output ineligible for copyright protection, potentially placing it in the public domain. However, the Hallwood-Imoliver deal leverages Suno's Terms of Service for paid users, which contractually grants full commercial use rights to the generated songs, even if copyright isn't guaranteed. This creates a "strategic exploitation of the gap between the ambiguities of public copyright law and the certainties of private contract law". The broader industry, including major labels, is simultaneously suing AI platforms like Suno for copyright infringement while also negotiating licensing deals, highlighting the complex and divided landscape.Industry Reaction and Future ImplicationsThe deal has sharply divided the music industry. Proponents like Neil Jacobson see it as "expanding what's possible," while many established artists and industry leaders view generative AI with alarm, citing fears of "devaluation and theft" due to training on uncompensated copyrighted music. This development puts immense pressure on streaming services to develop new policies regarding AI-generated content, moving it from a backend moderation issue to a front-end policy challenge.Ultimately, the Hallwood-Imoliver agreement is a prototype for new creative partnerships, foreshadowing a "complex hybridization" of human and machine in music creation. It elevates the human skills of curation, taste, and aesthetic direction, reshaping the music value chain and ushering in "the era of the 'music designer'".
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AI, Creativity, and Artistic Authenticity: An Enduring Debate 19.07.2025 13mntJoin us as we explore the heated debate surrounding artificial intelligence in creative domains, addressing the "not fair" sentiment and anxieties about AI's "genuine creative spark". We'll demonstrate how these debates are not new, but echo historical disruptions like photography challenging painting, synthesizers redefining music, and digital art tools like Photoshop being criticised as "cheating". In each instance, technology forced a redefinition of artistic skill, shifting focus from manual execution to conceptualisation, curation, and the intelligent application of new instruments.While AI excels at algorithmic ingenuity and rapid iteration, it lacks subjective experience, emotions, and consciousness – qualities central to the human "creative spark". This means AI output reflects patterns from existing works, risking aesthetic stagnation. The "not fair" sentiment is also driven by economic anxieties (job displacement) and copyright concerns, as AI often trains on copyrighted material and purely AI-generated work is generally not copyrightable under current U.S. law without human contribution.The podcast argues that AI functions as a powerful tool that augments, rather than replaces, human creativity. The future of art will involve sophisticated human-AI partnerships where human judgment, curation, and the ability to imbue art with meaning remain paramount. The value of human art will increasingly lie in its authenticity, emotional depth, and the unique connection it fosters. This era demands new skillsets like "prompt engineering" and "AI artistry," reinforcing that artistic expertise adapts and evolves, but the human element remains irreplaceable for art that truly resonates.
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AI's Impact on Music Economics - The Velvet Sundown Effect 06.07.2025 26mntThe music industry is at a turning point as generative AI reshapes how songs are created and monetized. By flooding streaming platforms with cheap, infinite music, AI exploits the “pro rata” royalty model—diluting payouts for human artists. Industry forecasts suggest creators could lose over €10 billion in revenue by 2028. Cases like “Velvet Sundown” highlight how AI bands achieve algorithmic success with no real-world presence. Meanwhile, listeners say they prefer human art, but blind tests reveal they can’t tell the difference. This podcast explores how AI blurs the line between art and product, challenging the future of music itself.
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The Velvet Sundown_ Spotify's Phantom AI Band 29.06.2025 19mntThe Velvet Sundown is a mysterious music project on Spotify that rapidly amasses hundreds of thousands of streams in 2025 despite having no real-world presence. Many suspect it is AI-generated, pointing to red flags like non-existent band members with distinctive but unsearchable names, uncanny AI-generated imagery, and a “flowery, ChatGPT-style” artist bio that even includes a fabricated Billboard quote.The music is generic, “country-tinged roots-rock” with repetitive motifs like “dust,” described as having the “veneer of a Suno creation.” Distributed through DistroKid, the project’s rapid rise is attributed to sophisticated algorithmic manipulation. Its 26 tracks are “smuggled” into numerous large, popular user-curated playlists—such as “Vietnam War Music” and “The O.C. Soundtrack”—where they appear alongside genuine classics despite having no thematic connection.This “blitz of placements” exploits Spotify’s recommendation system, triggering features like Discover Weekly and greatly expanding The Velvet Sundown’s reach. The phenomenon sparks heated debate among listeners, many of whom feel deceived and call for clear labeling of AI-generated content.The case raises serious questions for the music industry about transparency, algorithmic responsibility, the economic impact on human artists, and the meaning of authenticity in music. It also prompts competitors like Deezer to implement AI detection and labeling policies.
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Art and AI: A 19th-Century Parallel 23.06.2025 15mntThe disruptive impact of new technologies on the art world by drawing a parallel between 19th-century photography and 21st-century generative AI.
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The upcoming Apple Music AI 17.06.2025 15mntApple Music's increasing integration of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) to enhance user experience and personalisation. It details officially confirmed features already in use or set for release, such as AI-generated curated playlists like the 'Favourites Mix' and 'New Music Mix', the Autoplay function which intelligently queues similar songs, and the 'Listen Now' tab for personalised recommendations. The document also highlights natural language search capabilities via Siri and in-app, Apple Music Sing for vocal isolation, and the upcoming AutoMix for seamless DJ-like transitions. Furthermore, the text discusses rumoured or speculative AI features, including on-demand AI playlist generation, the potential for an 'AI DJ' with commentary, and a more conversational Siri. Finally, the acquisition of AI Music hints at future adaptive and generative music possibilities, showcasing Apple's commitment to subtly infusing AI across its music services for a more intuitive and personalised experience.
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AI Music's Crossroads 10.06.2025 24mntLicensing Battles:The core conflict centers on major labels—Universal, Warner, and Sony—suing AI companies like Suno and Udio for copyright infringement. As the legal dust begins to settle, the focus is shifting toward licensing negotiations. These discussions include terms around fees, royalties, equity stakes, content identification systems, and control over platform features.Creator Concerns:Songwriters, publishers, artists, and ethical AI companies have voiced frustration and concern, feeling sidelined by potential deals between the labels and the same companies they once accused of infringement. Key worries include whether creators will have any influence over these agreements, if they’ll receive fair compensation, and whether these deals will erode the industry’s stance on responsible AI use.The Rise of AI Artists:Technological advancements—such as Suno’s powerful Song Editor—and the emergence of dedicated AI entertainment firms are giving rise to autonomous virtual artists, like Timbaland’s TaTa and Stage Zero. This marks the beginning of a potential new genre or movement, dubbed “A-Pop,” which began gaining traction in 2023.
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When AI Creates: Navigating Copyright in Music 07.02.2025 12mntExplore the evolving world of AI-generated music in our latest episode. We break down a recent U.S. Copyright Office report that reveals why music created solely by AI isn’t eligible for copyright protection, while tracks that blend human creativity with AI can be. We dive into what this means for musicians, the broader impact on the music industry, and how future reviews of AI training practices might shift the legal landscape. Tune in for a clear, insightful look at the intersection of law, technology, and creativity.
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AI in Music: Creativity, Ethics, and the Future of Sound 04.12.2024 16mntIn this episode, we dive into the rapidly evolving world of AI-powered music creation. From Spotify's embrace of AI tools to SoundCloud's innovative remixing and beat-generation features, we explore how major platforms are shaping the landscape of music technology. We'll discuss the ethical debates around copyright and artist compensation, the role of AI in augmenting human creativity, and the potential impact on traditional music production skills. Join us as we unpack the balance between technological innovation and artistic integrity, and consider what the future holds for AI in music.
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Innovation, Ethics, and the Future of Creativity 24.11.2024 8mntIn this episode, we explore the dynamic and controversial world of AI in music, drawing insights from whatsupinmusic.com. We cover the rise of platforms like Google's Orca, which evolved into Lyria after copyright hurdles, and innovations like Suno V4 and Jen's StyleFilter which bring unprecedented creativity to music-making. We'll discuss the ethical and legal challenges around copyrighted material and how platforms like YouTube's Dream Track and Jen are pushing for transparency and artist consent. We also dive into the political landscape, examining how deregulation and global policy shifts could shape the future of AI in music, from potential innovation booms to fears of displacing human artists. Finally, we'll reflect on how artists and the industry can adapt, innovate, and thrive amidst these transformative changes.
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Bridging Time: The Beatles, AI, and the Future of Music Creation 11.11.2024 10mntFor today's podcast, we're diving into the buzz around "Now and Then," the Beatles' new track that uses AI to bridge past and present—and it’s making history with two Grammy nominations. This marks the first time an AI-assisted song has been nominated. In the episode, we'll explore how AI was used to clean up old recordings of John Lennon, allowing them to be seamlessly combined with fresh recordings from Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr. We’ll also discuss what this means for the music industry: the possibilities AI could bring for collaborations with iconic voices from the past and the big question of how much AI will shape the future of music creation.
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AI Amplified: The Future and Ethics of Music Creation 03.11.2024 14mntIn this episode, we dive into the transformative role of artificial intelligence in the music industry. We explore Universal Music Group's partnership with Klay Vision, aimed at enhancing music creation tools for artists, and discuss Timbaland’s collaboration with Suno AI, which raises ethical questions around AI's use of artists' work. From boosting creativity to navigating copyright concerns, we uncover how AI is reshaping the music landscape.
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Timbaland’s Partnership with Suno and the Ethics of AI in Art 23.10.2024 16mntIn this episode, we explore the intersection of music production and artificial intelligence, spotlighting a groundbreaking collaboration between renowned music producer Timbaland and AI music company Suno. Together, they aim to revolutionize the industry by merging human creativity with AI innovation. But as AI’s role in art grows, so do ethical concerns. We also dive into the controversy surrounding AI’s use of artists' work without consent, with over 10,500 creators protesting the practice. Join us as we unpack the future of AI in music and the challenges of ensuring ethical standards in the creative world.
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