SteveXFR Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Should AI have any place in music? Musicians are quite rightly against AI being used to create music but some of the same people seem fine with using it for artwork or videos so happy with replacing other artists who support the music industry. Considering that its replacing real artists plus uses enormous amounts of energy plus it keeps any information you put in (nothing is ever free), is it right in your opinion to use AI as part of your art or any art? Quote
neepheid Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Generative AI can get in the bin as far as I'm concerned. It makes an absolute mockery of the years I've spent learning an instrument. It's a disgustingly insulting short cut. Get gud or eff off. *mic drop* 2 Quote
80Hz Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago In terms of generative AI, it's basically an inevitability in my industry (music adjacent) at this point, so I'm resigned to it. We've been using trained neural nets in specific applications for years now anyway (i.e. noise reduction) and they tend to perform very well - but the lines are starting to blur as to where generative AI fits into that. Ethically, I view gen AI in its present and growing form as a pure expression of rentier capitalism. So whether it belongs in music is down to your attitudes as to whom value in creative work should accrue (I feel this will inevitably slide into politics, sorry mods, so that's all I'll say). I think we're very quickly moving towards a world where AI generated = low value and low effort advertising, memes, misinformation, and propaganda. So in my more optimistic moments I believe there will always be a place for us meatbags. Quote
Cato Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago (edited) It's going to become increasingly unavoidable unfortunately. I don't want any part of it, to the point where I block anyone on social media who posts unlabelled AI content, even if it's just a description of an image. Although the torrent is such that I think eventually it will just be easier to leave social media. I've even seen it creeping into Basschat where people have cut and pasted responses from Chat GPT or some such,omwtime containing glaring errors, without crediting their source, in response to questions posted by other members. At the moment such things are still identifiable, but give it another 12 months and none of us will know whether what we are seeing, hearing or reading online has been authored by a human or a machine. Interesting times. Edited 1 hour ago by Cato 1 Quote
gjones Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago It depends on whether the consumer will accept, AI music, AI films, AI books, AI online content, AI whatever. If people are made aware that music, films, books, online content, is AI created, then they may reject it. If creative output of all genes can be show to be guaranteed human, then I can see people choosing the human option rather than the AI one. At this stage people don't know if it's AI ,or if it's human, and they don't yet have the option to choose. Quote
EBS_freak Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Of course it should - but at the moment its largely misunderstood and not regulated properly. For all those against AI, I would wager a lot of them were also eager to watch the Beatles Get Back documentary and listen to "Now and Then", both of which would not be a thing without AI. Quote
Hellzero Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Did anyone see Sarah Connor in the matrix these days? Quote
EBS_freak Posted 58 minutes ago Posted 58 minutes ago 2 minutes ago, gjones said: It depends on whether the consumer will accept, AI music, AI films, AI books, AI online content, AI whatever. If people are made aware that music, films, books, online content, is AI created, then they may reject it. If creative output of all genes can be show to be guaranteed human, then I can see people choosing the human option rather than the AI one. At this stage people don't know if it's AI ,or if it's human, and they don't yet have the option to choose. It will be interesting if older films will become seen as more precious because they are pre-AI. I dont think it as easy as saying "if the consumer will accept" - if you give people no other option, the decision is made for them. If it's all driven by cost, the cheapest will always win. Are people really impacting the sales of Coca-Cola because they cheaped out and went AI for the last two years on their Christmas advertisements? Quote
wateroftyne Posted 58 minutes ago Posted 58 minutes ago As a tool, it's useful. As a means to generate creative content, it can get in the sea. Quote
EBS_freak Posted 56 minutes ago Posted 56 minutes ago Just now, wateroftyne said: As a means to generate creative content, it can get in the sea. Its funny isn't it. As AI adoption comes into the place - the industry is quickly learning that AI is rubbish at doing the jobs that people hate. Quote
SteveXFR Posted 51 minutes ago Author Posted 51 minutes ago Im currently at a point where I will avoid knowingly listening to bands who I know use AI. Quote
neepheid Posted 50 minutes ago Posted 50 minutes ago 7 minutes ago, EBS_freak said: Of course it should - but at the moment its largely misunderstood and not regulated properly. For all those against AI, I would wager a lot of them were also eager to watch the Beatles Get Back documentary and listen to "Now and Then", both of which would not be a thing without AI. You need to be careful not to turn this conversation into a binary choice and an "us vs. them" type situation. I was careful to use the term "Generative AI". I'm all for AI automating humdrum tasks, or doing things which are impossible for humans (like the software which turns a full recording back into multitracks to allow remixing which I believe you are alluding to). But using it to create "art" that the user could never hope to do under their own steam, that can fork right off. Quote
Cato Posted 37 minutes ago Posted 37 minutes ago There's a huge backlash against AI in the gaming community at the moment, especially where it's being used as a substitute for human creativity. It'll be interesting to see how it plays out given that gaming studios are a natural fit to use AI to cut staff and speed up production. I suspect in the end the big studios will carry on down the AI road regardless but it will create a niche for independent companies making 100% human authored content. Quote
Ben Jamin Posted 19 minutes ago Posted 19 minutes ago Yeah it's terrifyingly powerful with music! IMO we should cast it into the fires of Mount Doom 😅 A producer I work with is really into this stuff, and has used AI software to learn the voice patterns of singers he regularly works with and has a lot of content from, to the effect that he can now 'sing' into an SM57 in the mix room, and an uncannily familiar female pop vocalist generates back through the monitors. He hasn't used it on any published work but it's scarily good, and a lot easier and cheaper than hiring said vocalist. She is amazing, but the AI model does everything quicker, with plenty of variation. So far he will only use it for group backing vocals and choir parts in the mix. In much the same way that generative AI has taken over a lot of voiceover work (Artlist etc), I wonder if we'll see generative models of vocalists and session players becoming common. We could have suite of virtual session players to prompt - you could try a track with models based on Marcus Miller, Leland Sklar, Chris Wolstenholme? Not even touching generating whole pieces of 'music', or re-orchestrating songs you feed it. Cool that we could, really not sure if we should! Quote
SteveXFR Posted 15 minutes ago Author Posted 15 minutes ago It does cut costs for the businesses using AI but does that saving get passed on to the consumer? I seriously doubt it. Quote
velvetkevorkian Posted 10 minutes ago Posted 10 minutes ago All the worst people in the world are all in on it which is a bit of a red flag for me. 1 Quote
fiatcoupe432 Posted 5 minutes ago Posted 5 minutes ago 43 minutes ago, neepheid said: (like the software which turns a full recording back into multitracks to allow remixing which I believe you are alluding to). You can also do this without the help of AI ! Producers have Been splitting tracks for donkeys years Quote
Cato Posted 5 minutes ago Posted 5 minutes ago (edited) 6 minutes ago, velvetkevorkian said: All the worst people in the world are all in on it which is a bit of a red flag for me. Some of the richest people and companies in the world too. And the UK government wants to give them the rights to use all UK owned intellectual property to train their AIs for free. (on an opt out basis). https://www.forbes.com/sites/virginieberger/2025/02/28/how-the-uks-ai-copyright-exception-hands-creators-work-to-big-tech-for-free/ Edited 3 minutes ago by Cato Quote
Cliff Edge Posted 3 minutes ago Posted 3 minutes ago (edited) AI at the moment is a bit like the early days of the internet. Far too many idiots were allowed to use it for fun at no, or very little, cost to them. Problem with the internet is they still have access. Edited 1 minute ago by Cliff Edge Quote
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