For the First Time, I'm SCARED of A.I. as a Music Producer

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 8. 05. 2024
  • As a music producer I was not scared of AI until today. What just happened with A.I. and music production is mind-blowing
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    00:00 For the first time, I am scared
    00:23 Can you identify the A.I. song?
    00:57 Chapter 1: Being a music producer
    01:40 Chapter 2: Insert Greedt Corporates
    02:11 Chapter 3: A.I. Enters the Game
    02:39 The reveal
    03:00 Chapter 4: Facing the Devil
    03:53 Creating an A.I. Track
    06:16 Creating A.I. Track in different genres
    07:35 Trying the new A.I. free beta app
    09:14 Let's try one last time
    10:10 Chapter 5: Existential Dread

Komentáƙe • 1,1K

  • @Alice-Efe
    @Alice-Efe  Pƙed 21 dnem +40

    If you enjoyed the video, please consider subscribing. It would really make my day ❀

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Pƙed 12 dny +1

      By 2030. A movie can be Made by prompt

    • @shanedixon4839
      @shanedixon4839 Pƙed 11 dny

      @@carkawalakhatulistiwa They're already on their way towards that with Sora AI video generator.

    • @Maplefoxx-vl2ew
      @Maplefoxx-vl2ew Pƙed 2 dny

      it really appears i have to fight this on my own with Benn Jordann on my side now.. this is my other youtube btw.. i'm a vtuber composer of many genres for video games.. you think we gonna stand silent on this when all these youtubers promoting this stuff like it's the next big thing lololol.. Udio music which anyone creates is not their own product.. the produced track is owned by Udio.. it's right in their legal terms.. they are not stupid.. it's non profit and no person can sell Udio produced music as their own products.. it's illegal.. otherwise UMG would have shut them down already like they did to Anthropic ai website.. I bet they will still go after Udio cuz there are too many people thinking they can use it as their own.. it's 100 percent not legal.. follow Top Music Attorney... will you stand with us agains this? i'm so tired of youtube composers using this ai stuff as clickbait for views..

    • @jahstafari4606
      @jahstafari4606 Pƙed dnem

      3:33 made any savings on music so far? 😅 thats what i wrote to some Polish producer worried about this in his video ....averidge idiot consumer will not notice difference ....i could tell its AI for some acoustic gypsy guitar music ...i liked it .....music producers is done ...we is done as humans ...AI will be creating we will be consuming .............hmm no tnx i'm off outta civilisation far far from anrdroids that cant live without smartphone ...now i know i was right 20 years ago what will be .....bad things from it all chipped transhuman 5G androids is not human race and build all this AI to take over ...whats our pourpose then?

    • @Maplefoxx-vl2ew
      @Maplefoxx-vl2ew Pƙed dnem

      @@jahstafari4606 it's illegal to retain ownership of anything created by ai music cuz it's sampling from songs already made.. it's right in their legal terms lololol.. this is what all these CZcamsR IDIOTS.. are not telling ppl. it's illegal .. you can't use it as your own product. ppl are so dumb in 2024... they will do anything for view numbers

  • @strangelet4588
    @strangelet4588 Pƙed 3 dny +10

    We’ve been so desensitized with samples, auto tune, drum machines, grid snapping, etc that AI generated music doesn’t stray too far from what people are use to. Maybe this pushes music creation back into the wonderful world of imperfection.

  • @NokiArguello
    @NokiArguello Pƙed 25 dny +230

    Digital content has been comoditized. The best path forward for artists is to create experiential performances thay people can enjoy live, outside of the digital world. That's the new frontier for musicians, back to the beginning, where the listener and the artist are sitting in the same room sharing a human experience.

    • @tutubeos
      @tutubeos Pƙed 25 dny +6

      I’m not so sure about that
 Did you see the virtual concert of ABBA? Yes, people were there in the audience , but there were holograms on the stage. If music will be crested by AI, the new “artists” will be AI generated
 the “concerts” will be digital as well
 horrifying đŸ€ŠđŸ»â€â™‚ïž

    • @johnnyeproductions
      @johnnyeproductions Pƙed 25 dny +6

      streaming services was the worst thing to happen to the music industry... this however, may eclipse that 10fold

    • @owenmarshall1623
      @owenmarshall1623 Pƙed 24 dny +5

      We’ve made everything formulaic and easily ai able. How will new styles break through in the ai world?

    • @NokiArguello
      @NokiArguello Pƙed 24 dny +8

      You guys, that's my point... as "art consumers" the choice is ours as to where we will put our money on, will you buy a digital show? Or will you choose to support your local artist by attending to their shows? Live art may end up being an underground experience, however it will be the only way to acces REAL human art, as oppose to simply consuming AI generated commodities that are cool but empty of soul.

    • @MikeManaMusic
      @MikeManaMusic Pƙed 23 dny +6

      That’s why people love Marc rebillet, it’s so real and authentic

  • @RobertJMitchell2012
    @RobertJMitchell2012 Pƙed 25 dny +341

    George Orwell predicted this in 1949 in his novel nineteen eighty four. "While he is waiting for Julia, he recognises a song that a prole woman below the window is singing, which is a popular song written by the versificator, which is a machine that writes songs with no human input." Yikes!

    • @SyncrisisVideos
      @SyncrisisVideos Pƙed 25 dny

      George Orwell was a reactionary spy who kept a list on people he suspected to be Leftist or Jewish and handed them over to government intelligence. He was an imperialist cop in India and attempted to rape his pre-pubescent niece. He wrote Animal Farm as revenge for being kicked out of Leftist organizations for being too fascist. His writing sucked balls, and the only reason his work ever achieved any notoriety is because the CIA saw value in the propaganda of his cartoonish portrayals and paid to publish his writing world wide and even paid to produce moving picture adaptations.

    • @johnnyeproductions
      @johnnyeproductions Pƙed 25 dny +10

      Orwell was a prophet just as Nostradamus was

    • @Positive_Tea
      @Positive_Tea Pƙed 24 dny +3

      Literally 1984!

    • @Positive_Tea
      @Positive_Tea Pƙed 24 dny +1

      ​@@RedButtonTV1that sounds like a long time but it's definitely not. Shit is moving fast.

    • @iandeegrees1509
      @iandeegrees1509 Pƙed 24 dny +2

      @@johnnyeproductions I think he was an initiate

  • @twoleosmusic
    @twoleosmusic Pƙed 23 dny +100

    Ai is going to disrupt every industry. Nobody is prepared for how fast it is all going to happen. What is important is how we as a society take care of each other and how wealth is distributed.

    • @mrnelsonius5631
      @mrnelsonius5631 Pƙed 19 dny +13

      Yep. But enough people are selfish monsters they won’t allow it. Because those monsters have the power. Unless we remove them from power there’s no end to the suffering they’ll allow the rest of us to endure so they can hold on to their ill gotten gains. It’s going to get interesting, that’s about as much optimism as I can muster.

    • @drummermike5150
      @drummermike5150 Pƙed 17 dny

      @@mrnelsonius5631 Wow, spot on! Exactly how I think but you put it in words perfectly.

    • @darrinsiberia
      @darrinsiberia Pƙed 15 dny

      Good luck with that one. This has all been happening since Reaganomics. We're just finally seeing the final act in a large stage play.
      By the time it gets really really bad. Millennial Gen Z will be at an age to do something... but they will all be too brain dead zombie fied to do anything.

    • @anniesthesia
      @anniesthesia Pƙed 15 dny +2

      The cost to run AI is too high. Sam Altman himself said that to build the systems to host AI in the future will take nearly 1/4 of the USA's annual GDP (Ann. GDP is $27 TRILLION). Then there is the environmental harm creating that much energy.

    • @crnkmnky
      @crnkmnky Pƙed 15 dny +1

      ​@@anniesthesia There seems to be plenty of transhumanist VC money available to throw at this industry. And just like crypto, people stop caring about the environmental harm once they can justify a personal benefit. 😕

  • @anniesthesia
    @anniesthesia Pƙed 25 dny +103

    Good thing I make music for me. I only release things so I can say I'm done with it.

    • @ET_AYY_LMAO
      @ET_AYY_LMAO Pƙed 25 dny +11

      Same. The music im most proud of has less than 10 listens on soundcloud. I dont mind I exclusively just make music when im in the mood and want to be creative.

    • @IgnusVermaak
      @IgnusVermaak Pƙed 20 dny +7

      Same, making music with AI will never be as gratifying as making it on your own.

    • @eijffelbridge
      @eijffelbridge Pƙed 17 dny

      It never will be indeed. They may take our money, but not the enjoyment of creating our own art. ​@@IgnusVermaak

    • @synkrotron
      @synkrotron Pƙed 16 dny +1

      same

    • @darrinsiberia
      @darrinsiberia Pƙed 15 dny +4

      Make music to help people. And you'll always have an audience and a future. Because AI doesn't do that.

  • @MikeManaMusic
    @MikeManaMusic Pƙed 23 dny +43

    The purpose of music is connecting with each other. Before we had electronic devices music was so rare. We had to go outside to listen to music in live environments and meet other people to make the music together.
    I think in future live music will become more important than ever

    • @Paladinoocara
      @Paladinoocara Pƙed 20 dny +3

      â–șI think in future live music will become more important than ever◄
      I arrived at this same conclusion sometime ago. Even further, maybe it will make us extract even more value from live performances and real live recordings than we all have for music, either for electronic or acoustic. That's a positive possible result.

    • @JeremyDahl
      @JeremyDahl Pƙed 19 dny

      The point of music consumption is entertainment. The point of creating music is meaningless

    • @Paladinoocara
      @Paladinoocara Pƙed 19 dny +3

      ​@@JeremyDahl meaningless? You have no idea of what you're saying.
      The meaning is the HUGE flood of dopamine and other hormones that gives us pleasure, and second, you can make money which is a medium of exchange of goods and services.
      The same happens with any other aspect of life, from sex, eating when hungry to going on a vacation...
      That's the meaning. That's why you get up from bed, it is because of what you FEEL. That is what matters, the same with creating music.

    • @JeremyDahl
      @JeremyDahl Pƙed 19 dny

      @@Paladinoocara 27 people exactly, care how a dj performs or if Beyonce is lip syncing

    • @MikeManaMusic
      @MikeManaMusic Pƙed 18 dny +2

      @@JeremyDahl I'm not talking about DJs or Popstars, I talk about people like Marc Rebillet. He is a perfect example for how amazing live music is with all its imperfections

  • @thehighlander8322
    @thehighlander8322 Pƙed 25 dny +27

    As a DJ I really notice when a producer has put his hearth and soul in a track and is not afraid of trying new things. Unlike manny producers who just do the same trick over and over (like an ai) and never leave their comfort zone, these are the tracks that really set the the tone of the set and will be remembered and requested by the audience in the years to come. I see ai as just a tool, just like when digital dj’ing took over vinyl. Dj’s didn’t got replaced by automated playlists, event in electronic music people stil want to experience the human aspect.
    In the end the human equation behind the music, should not be underestimated in my opinion!

    • @kmilamv
      @kmilamv Pƙed 24 dny +2

      Yeah as a DJ I feel the same, generic doesn’t click me

    • @omarr2423
      @omarr2423 Pƙed 21 dnem +4

      I think the 70's will be back again

    • @torsten23
      @torsten23 Pƙed 19 dny +1

      I guess you are wrong


    • @mindsteelness385
      @mindsteelness385 Pƙed 16 dny

      @@torsten23he is TOTALLY right man

    • @juan_ta
      @juan_ta Pƙed 14 dny +1

      Still, these machines need to be trained on something. If not given new input they will be limited or boring. Right now that means human artists. (...what a clarification I've just made 🙄)

  • @mortengu1385
    @mortengu1385 Pƙed 22 dny +22

    The day that music died... It used to be known as Feb. 3, 1959, when Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson were killed in a plane crash. But now we can see that it actually happened on March 21, 2024, with the stable release of Suno v3.

  • @mx_strong
    @mx_strong Pƙed 25 dny +113

    I hope that there will be a movement that embraces human-made music with all it's imperfections. AI may make generic music in the future and do it well, but human's will make something that means something more to them and through expressing their feelings, I believe humans make deeper music, that's more thought out and felt. Maybe I'm just hopeful, but making music is fun, making music is like a therapy, telling a story and I hope people will still appreciate human-made music forever and if they do not, it will still be my hobby, because it's fun and makes me feel better.

    • @yahymusic
      @yahymusic Pƙed 25 dny +5

      i couldnt have said it better

    • @alexgerto
      @alexgerto Pƙed 25 dny +7

      I absolutely agree with this. Making music is therapy, followed by creating a circle of relationships with people who have the same symptoms.

    • @AlmerosMusicCode
      @AlmerosMusicCode Pƙed 25 dny +3

      #noAI

    • @_B.C_
      @_B.C_ Pƙed 25 dny +5

      Check out the DAWless scene. Kinda impossible for ai to make music live with hardware.

    • @tutubeos
      @tutubeos Pƙed 25 dny +5

      There will be a human movement for sure , BUT
unfortunately it will be just a little niche
 like for example the Amish community


  • @lucjanchrustek7774
    @lucjanchrustek7774 Pƙed 20 dny +41

    "I studied music for about 12 years, and I was sure that the day would come when people would hear me, and somehow I would be able to monetize my hard work. Then, we got this. I cry."

    • @FulguroGeek
      @FulguroGeek Pƙed 17 dny +8

      Dont need to cry, in 2-3 years we will be able to create our own bluck buster movies with sound track actor voice, big VFx for 3 bucks instead of 100 millions! Lol

    • @msscott22
      @msscott22 Pƙed 17 dny +10

      @@FulguroGeekYou're not wrong, but no one is going to care either. Art is dead.

    • @Magpie1701
      @Magpie1701 Pƙed 8 dny +4

      @@msscott22 It'll actually be a new era of the finest art ever created. But we will not be doing the heavy lifting.

    • @msscott22
      @msscott22 Pƙed 8 dny +4

      @@Magpie1701 No, art is dead. It's over. You'll see. You'll be making blockbuster movies in your office, but no one will even care. No one will watch. No one cares if everyone can do it, and they especially don't care if it's being done by A.I. Just watch.

    • @Magpie1701
      @Magpie1701 Pƙed 8 dny +2

      @@msscott22 yeah alright well stay unhinged, I plan to enjoy the future.

  • @petramakesmusic675
    @petramakesmusic675 Pƙed 24 dny +14

    I tried to film a similart video 2 days ago but I had to stop mid shooting because I could feel like panic settling in. Not only this is terrifying but also f*cking unfair towards hard working musicians. I firmly believe it won't replace art, but making a living out of this will be... so much more difficult. As if it's not difficult enough already.

    • @citizenworld8094
      @citizenworld8094 Pƙed 13 dny

      It will remove the one finger Freddy's. Anyone who has gone to the effort of actually learning music in university won't be scared of a new tool because creativity

    • @rootbeermcgee
      @rootbeermcgee Pƙed 9 dny +1

      Hey man there is nothing to worry about, if it does take off just know that the idea of music created by a human will be a major selling point. Also if you have a loyal fanbase you'll be straight. People more so connect to the person behind the music, AI music over time will lose is lustre

    • @petramakesmusic675
      @petramakesmusic675 Pƙed 9 dny

      @@rootbeermcgee Thanks a lot!

    • @brendonw456
      @brendonw456 Pƙed 5 dny

      ​@@citizenworld8094 Yeah. No. Practiced musicians will be able to play live performances, sure...but that market is already HEAVILY saturated. There's only so many venues. It would have to be in person. Otherwise...online...obviously AI could just be used to make an avatar play music while streaming.
      Idk how you think going to school to learn to play an instrument is going to do much to preserve your career. These people will have AN avenue to make SOME money...but the amount of money being offered for these kinds of things will also be SEVERELY diminished. It's *remarkably* naive to think otherwise, if not outright denial of the reality that is coming upon us

  • @mikee.
    @mikee. Pƙed 20 dny +8

    The "AI is just a tool"-era is officially over

  • @lleevv1052
    @lleevv1052 Pƙed 25 dny +11

    This is just the start too. It will develop and get better and better.

  • @AFNacapella
    @AFNacapella Pƙed 24 dny +13

    but we had many Al artists in the past:
    Weird Al Jankovic, Al Green, Al Jarreau...

    • @kojoefante
      @kojoefante Pƙed 3 dny

      You still don’t get it . If everyone is driving cars what happens to horse ?

    • @AFNacapella
      @AFNacapella Pƙed 3 dny

      @@kojoefante horses stop being work horses beaten to drag stuff through their own shit and start being beloved pets spoiled by rich people.
      guess we both didn't get what the other meant

    • @MaiLev
      @MaiLev Pƙed 3 dny +1

      This comment is so underrated đŸ€Ł

    • @michaeloliver7525
      @michaeloliver7525 Pƙed 2 dny

      sure I remember P Simon saying we should call him AI?

    • @juan_ta
      @juan_ta Pƙed dnem

      @@AFNacapella Please, take a look at Wall-E (Pixar production)! đŸ˜‚đŸ˜€đŸ˜¶đŸ˜ą We'll all be the AI spoiled pets! đŸ€­đŸ˜„

  • @weddy5700
    @weddy5700 Pƙed 25 dny +23

    How to stay calm and adapt to it? It will kill licensing first, music for ads, corporate uses, film and tv. As for real songs, people tend to go to artists, real people. I don’t see people being enthusiastic for an AI song.
    As for electronic music in clubs, most people dance on music they don’t know, so it could be dangerous if it’s cheaper for a club to produce an AI playlist than paying regular fees.
    So many questions. But yes, I was shocked by seeing this


    • @michaelsimpson9175
      @michaelsimpson9175 Pƙed 23 dny +5

      yea the thing is suddenly everyone can be an artist. Because everyone can use AI and release their own AI generations under their name. So what does it even mean to be an artist anymore?

    • @weddy5700
      @weddy5700 Pƙed 22 dny +2

      @@michaelsimpson9175 True! But this will have a price, as those companies must run servers etc. And AI must feed from somewhere and I guess that labels won’t accept that a long time. I guess that a legal canvas will exist someday for this, with at the end, maybe, fees paid by AI companies when they use copyrighted content to feed their engine.

    • @j3tman
      @j3tman Pƙed 22 dny +6

      @@michaelsimpson9175 Yeahhh, the fact that you could bust your ass to come up with a truly distinct sound only for someone to feed your body of work into a model to spit out music that bites your style and competes with you directly is so unnerving. I don't understand why we're doing this...

    • @rachidow2125
      @rachidow2125 Pƙed 21 dnem

      @@michaelsimpson9175 I already saw at some demo submission forms, that AI songs are not approved. I donÂŽt know how to check it, but still.

    • @naniyotaka
      @naniyotaka Pƙed 21 dnem +1

      @@michaelsimpson9175 Well, technically, they aren’t the artists. Just like in painting/drawing AI “artists” are just commissioners, they don’t make the art. The artist makes the art itself, which means he goes through every necessary step to achieve his vision, unlike the AI “artist” who just prompts a slot machine, doesn’t matter how elaborate that prompt may be, he is still using a slot machine and incapable of producing without it.

  • @lonelyplanetorchestra5080
    @lonelyplanetorchestra5080 Pƙed 20 dny +3

    First as an professional sax player I didn't like it but it is so good it will wanish all shity pop and contemporary music and will disolve corporate connection to run in a big music industry

  • @larrys2065
    @larrys2065 Pƙed 25 dny +19

    Performance will be all that's left in the future.

    • @JohnScigulinsky
      @JohnScigulinsky Pƙed 23 dny +10

      until tech-bros start paying for humanoid robots to stand on stage, pretend-performing AI-made music. I hate what I've written but I'll be damned if Elon Musk doesn't do that to open one of his speeches within the next 5 years...

    • @msscott22
      @msscott22 Pƙed 17 dny +2

      @@JohnScigulinsky Chuck E Cheese already been doing that for decades .

    • @FuZZbaLLbee
      @FuZZbaLLbee Pƙed 15 dny

      Just like back in the old days before recorded music.

    • @maryanne2025
      @maryanne2025 Pƙed 14 dny

      @@JohnScigulinskypeople still love live vocals that are organic and true I would think

    • @ThatOtherMikeyGuy
      @ThatOtherMikeyGuy Pƙed 7 dny +2

      @@JohnScigulinsky We already have a set of ABBA holograms filling arenas. The cold hard truth is the average person doesn't give a damn how 'real' their music is. Big Macs may not be great, but they outsell steak. This is the same deal.

  • @hannes3864
    @hannes3864 Pƙed 18 dny +7

    I found it beautiful to see you laughing and having fun while listening to the songs :). This having said, I think that the instant gratification everyone gets for "creating" something by "themselves" with just a few clicks is the real thread.

  • @LeonPhythian69
    @LeonPhythian69 Pƙed 16 dny +2

    Had a play with yesterday. It's a bit of nightmare to get it to consistently make an actual song over 1.30 that works but I definitely see it getting there when it starts spitting out stems then we are in trouble.

  • @Planetugm
    @Planetugm Pƙed 22 dny +1

    Great video, Alice. đŸ”„đŸ”„

  • @HumblerThanYou1
    @HumblerThanYou1 Pƙed 25 dny +45

    I'm genuinely shocked there are no class action lawsuits stemming from the use of AI being fed copywritten work to produce their tools. I feel like it wouldn't be too hard to prove in court, especially when you can feed the AI lines like "in the style of ____" and it actually sounds/looks like the artists' work. The basis for proof in copywrite claims in court aren't stringent and it would severely hamper AI companies. If a record label decided to take its own IP and make an AI then that would be 100% legal, but at that point they've paid the artist. They can do whatever they want with it.

    • @EntropyExhaustion
      @EntropyExhaustion Pƙed 25 dny

      This!

    • @nicotilda
      @nicotilda Pƙed 21 dnem +8

      I m what music industry called a bedroom producer or hobbyist (yeah I have another full time job) , I release my music anyway and guess what ? nobody cares :p when I try to talk with labels or radios, the comment are still the same , my music has too many different influences , too many elements, sounds too different from the sound they are looking for.. so dont be surprise AI produce something which sound like what was previously exiting, people love earing the same thing again and again. As a bedroom producer, I find myself navigating these challenges. While it can be disheartening to see the same patterns persist, I continue to create and release music that is true to my diverse influences, even if it doesn't fit neatly into current market expectations. It's about expressing creativity and passion, not just conforming. So to fellow musicians and producers: keep pushing boundaries, your unique sound is your strength, even if the industry isn't ready for it yet. Who knows? Maybe our different sounds are just the fresh wave the music industry needs.

    • @naniyotaka
      @naniyotaka Pƙed 21 dnem +1

      Well, worry not. Nothing will be done, just like with art (painting/drawing), nobody cares.

    • @tumpperi3891
      @tumpperi3891 Pƙed 21 dnem +6

      This reminds me when sampling was on the spotlight. People had similar reactions :D

    • @nicotilda
      @nicotilda Pƙed 20 dny +3

      the copyright fight in music has reach such a ridicoulous point where sometimes artists themselves cannot make a video with their own sound because it's copyrighted. copyright dont protect talent, it protect people who know our the system works and want to get the maximum money of their work. many talented artists has been spoiled because they didnt protect their work against lawyers and business people. btw, on sumo if you prompt contains a famous artist name, it's rejected

  • @schlitt
    @schlitt Pƙed 25 dny +33

    You hit the key point, which a lot seem to miss - that being; this is improving so rapidly. In a couple of years (Much shorter probably) not only will the imperfections be sorted, but the quality will be far beyond what a human can do. This applies to EVERYTHING. We need to be asking ourselves some serious questions...

    • @eyvindjr
      @eyvindjr Pƙed 25 dny +9

      Or, as with all neuro networks so far, it will hit a point of diminishing returns, and we will learn to see through the "fakeness" of AI music.

    • @schlitt
      @schlitt Pƙed 25 dny +7

      @@eyvindjr I love the optimism, but don't share your vision (unfortunately). The progress so far, since the "Attention" paper in 2017, and other landmarks is so astonishing, that nothing like it in human history even comes close.

    • @tutubeos
      @tutubeos Pƙed 25 dny +3

      I agree. My serious question are: why are we doing this? Why are we allowing our art and very soul to be replaced by a cheap piece of software?
      Unfortunately I know the answer as well
 very sad

    • @ringehdingehdurgen
      @ringehdingehdurgen Pƙed 23 dny +2

      @@tutubeos this is certainly the most interesting thing to teach AI - how many people would watch videos of an AI generating text documents or providing customer service? The music and art came first because of the novelty factor. That doesn't necessarily mean it'll be what AI is most prominently used for, it's just flashy

    • @dennisg967
      @dennisg967 Pƙed 22 dny +1

      AI is just a tool working for us. We should just accept the benefits we are getting from it. We just got the computer we don't even need to control.

  • @dexterous7516
    @dexterous7516 Pƙed 4 dny +1

    Exactly how I am feeling right now .... scared.
    You already have some following and streams, what should a beginner like me to do ?
    It was almost looking impossible to make a break as a new artist/producer but now the chances are going to be even more slim, especially when people are just uploading 100s (if not more) songs per day to platforms like Spotify.
    Been a few weeks since you posted this, Would love to see a follow up video on how you are dealing with this at a personal, emotional/mental level?
    Everyone I talked to they say you make music for yourself, not for a living. But I do want to make money with my skills too.

  • @olaf-likes-esc
    @olaf-likes-esc Pƙed 17 dny

    I heard about suno before and your video made me curious, especially because you showed us that you can enter your own lyrics (German worked surprisingly well). I had a lot of fun several evenings to try out different styles of music with more or less the same lyrics (heavy metal, hyper trance, classical ballad/tenor). The 10 free song fragments were used up every day. Now I got some ideas and would like to make a song with a DAW ... but unfortunatly I don't have the skills ...

  • @jonnygdj
    @jonnygdj Pƙed 23 dny +4

    How depressing. Not only have producers been mugged off for years, especially since downloads were introduced. Now I’d say A.I is the final nail in the coffin for a lot of us.

  • @Sneakycat1971
    @Sneakycat1971 Pƙed 23 dny +3

    I haven't touched my daw since V3 came . I'm impatiently waiting for more control over the outputs. The ability to upload your own song reference and chord information. It should be awesome for producers going forward. All you need now is a small bit of technical skill and an imagination.

    • @michaelsimpson9175
      @michaelsimpson9175 Pƙed 23 dny +1

      yea exactly the DAW integration will be fire. And more precise control over the output

    • @Sneakycat1971
      @Sneakycat1971 Pƙed 22 dny

      @@michaelsimpson9175 software companies that make DAW's better be paying attention and working night and day to integrate this technology. DAWs that Don't will become obsolete. I think going forward there won't be many musicians or singers actually recording music. The only thing they'll be able to make money at is playing live.

    • @rachidow2125
      @rachidow2125 Pƙed 21 dnem +2

      in a DAW you got infinite control.

    • @carcolevan7102
      @carcolevan7102 Pƙed 17 dny +3

      Other AI music tools are more DAW-like and offer more control. Check out AIVA, for example, which generates stems (separate tracks for each instrument) and has an edit mode that allows you to drag notes up and down on a DAW-like piano-roll interface to adjust the melodies, etc.

    • @tomhe286
      @tomhe286 Pƙed 3 dny

      Producers? Why would producers be needed anymore? To do what?

  • @jeffreyalme6480
    @jeffreyalme6480 Pƙed 21 dnem +1

    Crazy! I enjoyed your reactions the most.

  • @the3dotsguy...610
    @the3dotsguy...610 Pƙed dnem

    Im exited about this actually... for sampling
    Also imagine if yoy can add midi to it in the future and it will make it sound actually like an acoustic recording about it
    Or imagine just generating acapellas
    This gonna be very usegul...

  • @kaybecker
    @kaybecker Pƙed 25 dny +18

    I have started to do this seriously only 2 years ago (producing that is, I'm a a bit older) and I always knew I could somehow end up making it in the industry at least to live on it with my music and Record Label I started this year but now I ain't sure no more, it's a scare Alice and thank you for waking us all up.
    BUT I still think that people will want to hear music made by us even though AI can do it already exponentially faster than we can.
    We still have that human touch and feel that can still felt through a proper track I think. AI will always imitate us at best. We are still the originals. That's how I see it.
    Good luck to you my friend.

    • @cosmin_ofc
      @cosmin_ofc Pƙed 25 dny +2

      nice AI avatar bro :)

    • @Petran892
      @Petran892 Pƙed 25 dny

      I am afraid that AI will become the new ghost producer

    • @cosmin_ofc
      @cosmin_ofc Pƙed 25 dny +2

      @@Petran892 it will become a partner. As a new producer, I struggle so much finding a partner for vocals and lyrics ... Now with AI that pain is gone, and it expands other musical horizons for me. ( gonna post a short right now demoing this btw )

    • @tutubeos
      @tutubeos Pƙed 25 dny +7

      I’m not sure that the vast majority of people will bother if music is human or AI generated. That’s the problem. If the quality of AI generated music is “high”, people will listen to it without even knowing how it’s made. People already don’t care if music is made with a tape recorder or a computer or whatever AI mastering tool or human engineer., they won’t care if it’s AI generated if the end result is indistinguishable from human music. People are already following (I would say “idolizing”) AI influencers, most of them can’t even tell that those babes are not human
 and they don’t even care
 furthermore, human music is getting dumber and dumber, listeners are getting dumber and dumber as a consequence
 it’s really really sad

    • @Paladinoocara
      @Paladinoocara Pƙed 20 dny

      â–șWe still have that human touch and feel◄
      Unfortunately, AI can and WILL learn how to reproduce EVEN the most subtle imperfections... which is, in some sense, part of what we call our "soul, touch" on music, paint and so on.
      But if there is one possible good side to all of it, is that maybe we will start to give even more value to live performances, either electronic or acoustic.

  • @djbonlando
    @djbonlando Pƙed 25 dny +21

    if i find out that any DJ at one of my shows plays an AI track they''ll be banned, tarred and feathered.

    • @tamashalo
      @tamashalo Pƙed 25 dny +4

      how do you propose to do that? Create an AI to spot the AI lol

    • @dennisg967
      @dennisg967 Pƙed 22 dny +5

      Even if listeners enjoy it? Are you also trashing cats because people don't use horse carriages anymore to move around?

    • @KirbyHenry10
      @KirbyHenry10 Pƙed 19 dny +3

      ah yes, the old "I'm going to fight technology and new developments instead of adapting" path.

    • @djrobitonzz
      @djrobitonzz Pƙed 18 dny +3

      Thats if you won't be the first to enjoy it😃

    • @theblowupdollsmusic
      @theblowupdollsmusic Pƙed 16 dny +1

      It's already happening. They've been playing songs with AI vocals for over a year. It just took time for the rest of the music to catch up. Vocals have been there for a while.

  • @LoveinScarcity
    @LoveinScarcity Pƙed 25 dny +1

    I don’t know how I feel about this yet, but your video about what’s happening is top notch!

  • @KROMERES
    @KROMERES Pƙed 4 dny +1

    Yeah this is crazy, even as a producer myself it is interesting. I'm not worried mysteriously, but this is crazy

  • @emcee19.05
    @emcee19.05 Pƙed 24 dny +13

    So basically, if you're not already a known top producer/dj, at most it seems you can be a local producer/dj in the underground scene, and hope to make enough money from gigs to survive. Yay to the automatization of everything.

    • @joao3547
      @joao3547 Pƙed 21 dnem

      if only we realized that musicians should get a wage

  • @CHMgamemedic777
    @CHMgamemedic777 Pƙed 25 dny +8

    Yeah! I'm scared too! I frown upon people who use AI in their production, asif they're not talented enough to do their own thing, cause every time a little bit of control is taken away from the producer, it becomes a little bit more soulless and less authentic.
    I refuse it, and I will continue to produce music my own human way. I imagine the AI has a lot of potential but will it ever master things as perfectionistic mix and mastering, melodies you haven't heard before, lyrics that can resonate with in a very deep level. We should for oncd trust our human brain and outdo the machines!

    • @karlhenriksvensson
      @karlhenriksvensson Pƙed 25 dny +3

      What is "the human way"? I guess you don't use computers, DAWs or any kind of recording device or even pen and paper. You only improvise lyrics on the spot and sing a capella without any instruments?

    • @karamba4516
      @karamba4516 Pƙed 25 dny

      I understand you but tbh i would not have a problem having ai assist me in some way. I actually tried suno out to see if it can create just something like a guitar melody in a specific key that I then could use in a track. But nope. Still throws out another hyper generic song that is not even worth sampling. But an ai tool that could create interesting loops, melody fragments etc could be nice, but unfortunately not in the mindset of any of those ai companies. For them it is all about throwing more content out to the masses...

    • @wolflover968alphamale8
      @wolflover968alphamale8 Pƙed 21 dnem +2

      ANY dumbshit can make "music" on a computer, and AI just reinforces the lazy factor about creating. AI is already effing with graphic art (paint, pencil, etc.) online, but it IS easy to tell between human-created art (which will always be the best), and cold, soul-less "art". At least human-created graphic art has a warmth, depth, and personality that AI will NEVER be able to touch. AI music? That's a blurred line, as far as being able to distinguish, despite this well thought out video. I see a time when "the herd" just gobbles up AI everything, since that is the path of least resistance. Me, as a person...I don't want "perfect" art. I want art that lives and breathes...not AI bulls**t.

    • @johnchedsey1306
      @johnchedsey1306 Pƙed 21 dnem

      AI as a tool to be crafted into a song via an actual human using ears is not a lack of talent. You sound like a guy who says only film is real photography or that the horse & buggy is the only real way to travel.

    • @rea639
      @rea639 Pƙed 15 dny

      @CHMgamemedic777 , So, you say you produce music? There were times when music was composed. Honestly, I don't care if "producers" like this AI idea or not. What matters most is how listeners perceive and enjoy the music. Sure, some people might have reservations about AI-generated music. There are concerns about authenticity, creativity, and the potential impact on human musicians and composers. However, AI-generated music also has its merits. It can provide new avenues for creative expression, offer tools for artists to explore innovative sounds, and even assist in the creative process. Ultimately, whether AI-generated music is embraced or rejected will largely depend on listeners' preferences and how effectively it resonates with them. If the music is enjoyable, meaningful, or thought-provoking to listeners, then it has fulfilled its purpose regardless of how it was created.

  • @chris_share
    @chris_share Pƙed 5 dny

    Great video that raises a large number of interesting questions! When I think about this, I always go back to Christopher Small's book "Musicking" where he says that "Music is not a thing at all but an activity, something that people do. " In that sense, people will always make music and AI, at least currently, seems a fairly poor imitation of "what people do". Cheers!

  • @wingedsheep2
    @wingedsheep2 Pƙed 7 dny

    Thanks for this honest opinion! Just a few years ago, in 2021 I was competing in the AI song contest with our homemade AI music generator. Back then it could output midi's that sometimes had good segments of a few seconds that we could sample from, but it was still really simple.
    I really hope human creativity stays and producers will just be able to explore more of their ideas with these tools.
    I'm a programmer, but I already see a transition to being more of a director of AI programmers, instead of typing out everything myself.

  • @therealmber
    @therealmber Pƙed 25 dny +8

    6:20 hello Female Blink 182...
    7:20 trailer for a movie starring Will Smith and Vin Diesel with a lot of CGI cars, guns, and cars with guns...
    8:35 Varg Vikernes gets out of prison, discovers AI on Mallorca. Reacts as expected.
    yes I guessed the A.I. songs in the beginning. Recognising Muad'dib's name AND Anna Kendrick playing Poppy the Troll was a dead giveaway. So having a wide pop culture vocabulary might be some buffer against being "tricked" by A.I. as long as it tends (as it seems to in both apps) to pick *one* example from its training set that is highly correlated with each part of its text prompt [insert hyperpedantic digression about some coder getting Burzum's flavour of metal wrong].
    But that has sort of been the case for ages. Everyone lifts from everyone else, as Paul Simon says, so if you listen for it you can hear, say, the Smashing Pumpkins in Nirvana, or early U2 in peak Foo Fighters, etc. etc. ad nauseam. The difference is maybe that Daft Punk sampled artists forgotten (or never known) by their audience, while A.I. will, more or less by design, tend to mimic the most widely recogniseable of its training set. Not a problem in the increasingly short-attention-span world of streaming hits the majors and platforms are pushing us to (what song gets rinsed on drive time radio for 6 weeks straight these days?).
    Is the solution to "stop" producing? I.e. make fewer songs, but more unique? Let the bots make samey muzak that always has a bazillion different titles and midjourney album art but is instantly recogniseable as 6000 flavours of "Bad Guy" with a Skrillex vocal sample? "We believe it is closer to the year 2199, Neo, and every song is now Levels".

  • @ElixirDeCarbone
    @ElixirDeCarbone Pƙed 15 dny +1

    Hopefully the DAW's will soon integrate some new tools based on this kind of algo, and therefore all music producers and composers will have more space and time to explore many more aspects of what 'writing music' can be, and which AI can still not touch. Anyway thx for sharing this!

  • @philippebackprotips
    @philippebackprotips Pƙed 19 dny +1

    The good part is that one can make a fuller experience uaing video, social reach, audio, all with a common integrity from a single person.
    Will require us to adjust.

  • @SanguineUmbra-cc5hj
    @SanguineUmbra-cc5hj Pƙed 21 dnem +5

    SUNO creates very catchy melodies, but if you use it for a long time, you begin to notice the same melodic moves. UDIO has much more varied melodies and more complex arrangements and harmonies. In UDIO it is more difficult to create a good long composition than in SUNO, but as a result it turns out better and more interesting. Plus in UDIO, of course, the quality of sound and, especially, vocals is much higher.
    I have already created several actually decent songs in various styles in SUNO and UDIO using my own lyrics. Here are some examples:
    SUNO:
    czcams.com/video/CwYwtXgAG-k/video.html
    czcams.com/video/Og258NuIPZg/video.html
    czcams.com/video/fuRuZND4iRs/video.html
    UDIO:
    czcams.com/video/To_ZpgnUaME/video.html
    czcams.com/video/wmvs2K3mwkE/video.html
    czcams.com/video/I1FpXsCPYTw/video.html

    • @gaborb6577
      @gaborb6577 Pƙed 20 dny

      Would it be possible to correct by hand or export to DAW?

    • @kenmasters2025
      @kenmasters2025 Pƙed 2 dny

      suno sucks for me. it doesn't understand prompts very well. udio is amazing, it understood what I wrote fairly well and gave me what I wanted.

  • @artists4earth199
    @artists4earth199 Pƙed 21 dnem +4

    Great topic Alice...NOW Stop!! nobody move !! Don't sell your studio on Ebay for a 10th of what you invested. It's a smokescreen meant to get us to train their @$@$$% models. Sure check em out have fun, take em for a spin...but don't be too KrEaTiVe with them. Asking for something like Beethovens 9th Symphony in the style of Deth , Sludge , Math , Polka, Metal, with Drake's voice raised and pitched in Autotune every 3 words, sung in Medieval Japanese will not be a big hit on Earth, on the distant planet Zaxlon it will be. Ok my friends heres what may be going down..the "Evil" brains making these programs are looking for the BIG payoff to sell or license to companies like..hmm let's say Apple . A soon to be coming example of what I propose, Apple puts AI into all their Flagship programs and creates a Logic Pro, Top Tier Level Subscription. The subscriber is allowed to create loops and songs, BUT the finished work has Apples newly created Digital Rights Management embedded protection .The AI "Prompt" Artist has the same deal with Itunes, only its now categorized as AI offerings. Apple is about making money and could care less how. Sooo... The AI Beast is free and will not be caged .Tame the beast and learn all the AI tools completely and incorporate them into your workflow. You pros reading this, show your clients why YOU are the best Prompt Artist around. For the amateurs, get to experience the magic of typing into existence something you only dreamed of hearing. Well thats my multiple takes on this remarkable subject. Every new creative breakthrough in history has been seen as negative and positive. For all creatives out there.. the sign in Mandarin for crisis is also opportunity. AI may dance on our creative producer graves or we Whoman Beeings will dance on AI's grave...one teensey weensy problem, AI Aint gotz know Bonz to stomps On.! That makes the score AI 0 Humans 1 Yeeeessss we are winning!!! Oh by they way this Text was created by Crap DPT 13.5 and a half.....nahhhh Im only Kidding Im real flush und bloood.. Keep KREEaToN... fellow ARteests

    • @dylanhogan1818
      @dylanhogan1818 Pƙed 20 dny +3

      I pity the fools on these internets who have not read your masterpiece. *chef's kiss* and so true and spot on. Too real with Apple and Spotify jumping on this low-key casually in their terms and either buying Suno / Udio or easily engineering their models on the literal world's entire collection of music. It's crazy I've been writing a screenplay on this very topic this past year, a satire murder mystery where the greedy music streaming service picks off the artists one by one replacing them with AI musicians. And now this is happening and I'm like yooooooo wtf how am I finna produce this in time before it literally happens. Lol Big Yikes. "We Were The Wooorld, We Were The Childrennn" is the title @artists4earth199 and @Alice-efe look out for it but odds are some AI company is scraping our data on this thread and will beat me to it. Gotta educate people tho and smile through our AI-Generated Tears! Cheers!

    • @michaeloliver7525
      @michaeloliver7525 Pƙed 2 dny

      way interesting angles here


  • @agreen9903
    @agreen9903 Pƙed 21 dnem

    Awesome content as always

  • @igmusicandflying
    @igmusicandflying Pƙed 24 dny +2

    The first thing I made with Suno just blew my mind. I could tell it was partly machine generated, but it sounded really good and was leagues beyond anything I have seen AI do before. I did a track a week project in 2022 (with a mulligan a month for a total of 40) with the idea of taking the best 8 or so to make an album from them. The track the AI put out was far from perfect, but if it had been one of my 40, it would probably make the cut for the final 8.
    There is going to have to be an economic reckoning as we seem to be approaching an AI singularity point where not just musicians and artists are out of jobs, but just about everyone.

    • @squealerpig8451
      @squealerpig8451 Pƙed 5 dny

      My friend you like many others are missing the big picture, we are gonna become Ai robots. Once neurolink chips are put into brains at young age that will directly connect the brain to the internet and ai. We will become a sentient ai. If humans from a young age don't use any creative or critical thinking and get ai to do everything we will be those robots. Robots are not gonna destroy us.We will become the robots

  • @aderitosilvachannel
    @aderitosilvachannel Pƙed 24 dny +6

    I can see how real artists will have zero chance of being heard, because their songs will be one in millions. Right now, little guys like me have almost no chance of even getting their songs to be played by someone. Soon, that chance will get so ridiculously low that it can be defined as zero. We're all pre-AI age producers, and we have learned our skills through hard work, minds full of dreams and whatever. But what will be the motivation of future producers to learn from scratch and devote their lives to producing music? To be honest, I don't even have motivation for music anymore.
    Some say we will keep making music for fun, but making music is not fun. It's hard work. The fun comes from knowing that people will value our hard work.

    • @rachidow2125
      @rachidow2125 Pƙed 21 dnem

      The fun comes from knowing that people will value our hard work.
      No, not at all. There is where u are wrong in my opinion. U donÂŽt need to give a shit about others. Off course itÂŽs really cool to hear good feedback, but you are making music for your self and bcause itÂŽs fun. If itÂŽs not fun, u better quit. Because nothing in the world u would finish, if you donÂŽt think itÂŽs fun. U never had that moment while producing, that you came into `The Flow`? That everything is going really fine and smooth, you make a lot of progress and come with good ideaÂŽs. Nothing can go wrong. For me, thatÂŽs the most fun part while producing. If IÂŽam done with the main idea or composition, than I begin to hate my life.
      Yes, itÂŽs a lot of work and yes I hate technical shit, like mastering (not needed so much if you learn to make your tracks `loud`) or just send it to a master engineer.
      ItÂŽs the same with djÂŽs that playing shitty music, just to follow a trend. If you play the music you like, you can always keep playing that while getting a carreer out of it.

    • @rachidow2125
      @rachidow2125 Pƙed 21 dnem

      donÂŽt get me wrong, again, itÂŽs really nice if people value your hard work. ItÂŽs the cherry on the pie. But if you donÂŽt have fun with producing, than I donÂŽt know what to say. Being creative while working on a track and hear the end result, is more value for me. You created it, not AI, not the neighbour, you. No matter how good or bad it is, you are creating things and you will getting better doing it (while having fun)

    • @naniyotaka
      @naniyotaka Pƙed 21 dnem +1

      The hard work is the good part. You made something, learned the craft and that’s an achievement, be prod of it even if you are the only one who will hear the end result. I make art for myself, just started learning the piano and FL because I want to create music for myself. I think I will never publish it, maybe in my game if I live long enough to see it through.

    • @aderitosilvachannel
      @aderitosilvachannel Pƙed 21 dnem

      @@naniyotaka I used to feel that way as well. But I've been making music for a long time, I already know what I can do, and I don't get much long term enjoyment from that, only short term. I feel proud about the things I make, but I also need to live and to be careful about what I devote my time to. I remember one day someone said to me: "You make music? That's cool! Can you make one now so I can see?". I said to that person that 5 minutes would not be enough, I would need a bit more, like one or two weeks more. The person looked at me like if I was retarded, like if it 5 minutes should be more than enough to press some buttons and let the computer invent the music. I heard lots of things like that through my life, so I began to understand that people really don't understand and don't care.

    • @aderitosilvachannel
      @aderitosilvachannel Pƙed 21 dnem

      @@rachidow2125 In the past, I felt a lot of fun. I've been more than 20 years creating music just for me. However, I don't feel that accomplishment feeling anymore, of seeing a new song arise from nothing. For me, it's just one more, even if I feel it's the best I ever made. The hard part is that people never hear what you do, and they always think you're just a beginner, just because you're not composing for famous people. After so much time, after hundreds of songs and half songs made, I can't feel enough motivation and energy to put into hearing the same sound for 2 weeks (sometimes even 2 months), just for my enjoyment, because on the second week I can't even stand hearing that sound anymore, although I still like it somehow.

  • @flibflob2785
    @flibflob2785 Pƙed 25 dny +20

    Okay, we're fucked

    • @dennisg967
      @dennisg967 Pƙed 22 dny +1

      Just relax and enjoy

    • @laurentsauvagnac
      @laurentsauvagnac Pƙed 22 dny +2

      Lol i love this answer because it's humble =) yes, we're basically fucked if we make music for a "market".. but somehow, people who want to feel something are still going to make music for their own.

    • @FortheSoulFtS
      @FortheSoulFtS Pƙed 4 dny

      @@laurentsauvagnac Yeah but you will pick up patatoes the rest of the day.... Human is fcked welcome to matrix.

  • @boscottmusic
    @boscottmusic Pƙed 21 dnem +1

    Amazing video. I've known this video was coming since 2014.

  • @TheGombo
    @TheGombo Pƙed 4 dny

    Wow. Thankyou Alice.
    What is all this saying to us? It’s saying go deeper into your art deeper into authentic self. Find what truly moves you. And perhaps that is what will truly move others. We are all connected.Fascinating times. I wonder where this will take us next?

  • @UgurAkdag
    @UgurAkdag Pƙed 25 dny +3

    If we separate money from the equation, the pleasure is on the making the music. The creation itself, creativity, transferring the emotions, struggle and getting the result.
    For the listeners on the other hand, its not a big difference. AI and human made music will be blend on platforms and no one will be sure which is which.
    So, no problem.
    This trend will increase, to the point that artists no longer in demand by "industry" as before.
    Many producers especially those who are going after money and fame in this "business" will chose another profession.
    There maybe be some people put front, some "stars" to entertain listeners on shows and performances singing on top of the AI music at the stage.
    People will rush to these tools to create their kind of promptic music via AI's help.
    Soon platforms overfill with these tracks, people will be rejoiced over the new freedom.
    It will eventually depress people due to mostly interacting something created by machines.
    Then quest for a change may be start.

  • @RemcoPeggeman
    @RemcoPeggeman Pƙed 2 dny +1

    Nice source material to get inspired by or to even remix.
    Don't forget that for a lot of people music isn't just music, it's also the fact that it's a story told by a person they look up to. We might end up in a future where commercials or background music are all AI generated and artists use AI-tools as tools to help out. I have a hard time foreseeing a future where people really become "fan" of AI-music. Maybe for a short time, but as soon as it becomes mainstream, counter-cultures will pop-up as always happens with music.

  • @garyloewenthal
    @garyloewenthal Pƙed 25 dny +1

    Excellent video, as usual. My takes (some of which are already articulated well in other comments):
    - I'm not too worried about AI's impact on my performing, which I've been doing since the early 70s (rock, pop, jazz, blues). Each performance is different, and is a product of the musicians' moods, the crowd, and a million other contextual and experiential things.
    Might AI be able to reproduce this one day? Might we be visited by aliens who can shred guitars better than we can? Might we figure out ways to leverage that if it happens, and make even better music and performances? Maybe; but can't worry about every hypothetical.
    I've been hearing about the death of live music since disco. Yes, certain trends and innovations pose a challenge. Others (better DAWs, streaming sites) provide opportunities, or a combo of challenges and opportunities.
    - On the songwriting side (where I'm all over the place, including house/EDM, reggaeton, rap, rock, blues...), I see AI-generated songs as just more songs. I already "compete" (not really, cause I want everyone to succeed) with millions of other songwriters online.
    We humans are not AI, though. We react to experiences and emotions. I'm not the greatest songwriter or lyricist. But I come up with stuff that is likely not part of the algorithm, even if the algorithm has built-in randomness. Also, the AI is only as good as the people who program it, and the data from which it bases its output. That's a finite set, and eventually AI songs from a common dataset, using a common set of code, will sound repetitive. Again, a hundred years from now, maybe AI can do everything, but the farther out in the future you go, the more other factors change, so it's impossible to predict.
    Bottom line, I'm not too worried, but I acknowledge that, like many other innovations, it will have some disruptive effect, and may cause some shifts, and possibly some expected or unforeseen positive benefits.

  • @CayneCarva
    @CayneCarva Pƙed 25 dny +28

    I kinda agree on your take on this topic, but I believe that ultimatly the A.I. music on demand will not stand the test of time, and this is just our times trend in music industry.
    Heres why - All through music history we have seen different trends changing the music scene the way we see it. We have gone through different music like the 80's glam rock with blazing guitar solos, and then suddenly it dissapeared in the early 90's when Nirvana brought grunge to the scene. Record labels first didn't want to sign them because they weren't playing "the right music", but when they saw people really liking it and the grunge scene started to blow up and have a following, then they signed grunge band after grunde band, and the music scene was now changed. But it wasn't the record labels that first took a shot at grunge music, it wasn't until they saw how big impact this new music had on people that they belived they could sell this new music.
    The record labels always think they know what they are doing, but time and time again it shows that when someone by themself is doing something new and starts getting peoples recognition, then the record labels will follow.
    Lokk at David Guetta - who would have thought in the 90's that underground DJ's and producers would sell out big arenas and festival shows and top the charts like they do today, and what greater example than David? When he produced "I got a feeling" for the black eyed peas, he brought a fresh sound to the mainstream, but it wasn't like electronic music was new, right? It had existed underground for many years, and it wasn't until David produced an EDM style track for a then allready well known band, introducing the genre to a whole new audience who got turned on by something new, that people really started getting their eyes up for this kind of music. The song blew up, and opened alot of doors for David, and the EDM music scene as well, as record labels really saw that this "new sound" was selling. If you had asked the record labels a couple of yeas prior to that to make an EDM style song, they probably wouldn't have, because it wasn't "the right music".
    And what about Adele, and Ed Sheeran, they were absolutely killing it when they were at the top of their game! And I believe they did so because they stood out in song writing and producing by using organic instruments most of the time, compared to this new EDM music who by then was topping the charts.
    Do you see where I'm going with this? A.I. makes great music by now, for sure, but they don't make anything new. They just have a formula of what has worked in the past, and makes a song in a soup mix of what has allready been done before. And if A.I. should top the charts for a while, what about when all music starts sounding the same, and someon independent starts making a fresh new sound? People will follow it, and when people starts following, so will the record labels and music industry.
    Most likely the A.I will be used as a music tool with time, rather than taking over an entire industry. Look at autotune - yes alot is using it, but then also the music industry isn't built around the autotune, is it? I bet they belived it would be so when it came on the marked, but it ultimatly just became a tool. And I believe A.I. will be a tool with time as well.

    • @stevensmith1788
      @stevensmith1788 Pƙed 25 dny +3

      And then A.I. is quickly trained on this new emerging style/trend and once again the market gets flooded? I too am still processing what this all means for human creative output.

    • @CayneCarva
      @CayneCarva Pƙed 25 dny +3

      @@stevensmith1788 Yes, they wil try, but the consumers will support the artist who innvented the new thing, I believe. And what about concerts? Are we going to a computer concert? I don't think that will happen

    • @stevensmith1788
      @stevensmith1788 Pƙed 25 dny +3

      @@CayneCarva no I suspect AI generated songs sang and fronted by a photogenic/sexy young singer, job done?

    • @CayneCarva
      @CayneCarva Pƙed 25 dny +1

      @@stevensmith1788 they allready do that, still - there are lot of artist, producers, and DJ's putting in the work and making it happen for themself. I believe in artists and their craft and ability to be uniqe and creative, rather than A.I. dominating the industry.

    • @CayneCarva
      @CayneCarva Pƙed 25 dny

      @@stevensmith1788 plus - the song's artists make is bigger than the genre itself. A.I. cant make new creative songs, but the brain can.

  • @yahymusic
    @yahymusic Pƙed 25 dny +4

    people said the same thing when ai generated art came out, but until today it still seems too artificial and i still prefer the human part. same thing with music, i rest my case.

    • @revlow
      @revlow Pƙed 25 dny

      For now
 until it improves further..

    • @Gutz-po9xf
      @Gutz-po9xf Pƙed 19 dny

      I also think, and another one is very easy to identify an AI image, maybe these songs generated by AI happen, in the beginning it can even have a hype from the listeners, but then it can become boring

    • @FortheSoulFtS
      @FortheSoulFtS Pƙed 4 dny

      Its is not the problem of discerning ai from human. It is the problem of the market, liberalism has our end and we will pick up patatoes to survive and not be hoemeless.

  • @Scripture-Man
    @Scripture-Man Pƙed 3 dny

    I think in the future there will be two kinds of music:
    1) Automatic AI music that does whatever you want, whenever you want.
    2) Music tied to personalities, directly linked with individuals online, and real-life experiences and performances
    Number 1 might be amusing for a while, and it might be fun some of the time, but there will always be a demand for number 2.
    It's like the difference between buying a microwave meal and watching an Italian guy rolling the dough of your pizza. It's like the difference between playing computer chess and sitting down with a friend to play the game.

  • @karamba4516
    @karamba4516 Pƙed 25 dny

    Fantastic video. I personally understand all the fear of artist, but I also truly believe we are overlooking a way more dangerous topic. Most artist rightfully fear that they might be replaced. But I think we might see way more tragic impact on us as a society, when all art just becomes instant on demand content. What will happen if we remove the self expression from us...
    But on the positive side: this technology will most likely push artist to become even more creative and finally push away from the highly formalized patterns of music. To be honest the ai also showed how interchangeable current music has become. Since decades we just play with established patterns, that are safe for the audience and the musicians as well.

  • @TheKillander
    @TheKillander Pƙed 23 dny +3

    As a hobbyist music producer, I am excited to see these tools. This is a great resource of material you can use in your own music.

  • @leonrodt-official6395
    @leonrodt-official6395 Pƙed 20 dny +3

    I stoped producing about 9 month ago, when there was only lalals, musicfy and maybe stable diffusion. I said goodbye to about 30 years of producing music. - Now hearing what suno, udio, or even sonauto does, it was the right decision.

    • @puremusicdaz
      @puremusicdaz Pƙed 18 dny

      have you picked up any instruments?

    • @leonrodt-official6395
      @leonrodt-official6395 Pƙed 17 dny +2

      @@puremusicdaz I play some instruments a little, like trumpet, guitar, drums. IÂŽll keep on making music for sure. But for years I was producing productionmusic for publishingcompanies and made sounddesign for games. Producing this music in the traditional way will not pay my rent anymore. But IÂŽll find my place in the music on demand world somehow - I hope...

    • @spark300c
      @spark300c Pƙed 5 dny

      @@leonrodt-official6395 well that good they play physical instruments. I think for game that want original sound tracks. A.I only producer generic sound stuff. I invented a sub genre of punk called chip punk. Since no well know A.I can not reproduce it.

  • @alby1819
    @alby1819 Pƙed 25 dny

    this is scary and sad about the future of the music but this in a small part imo already happen when spotify blow internet yeah there you can find everysong etc but as a user i found out that usually you listen to a song and go over to another one without going on the artist profile and dive deep in the other production, and was really different before spotify when there was just SoundCloud and usually you were more courious about what the other music maybe can made an artist when you listen to a song so as you said in the video the music on demand right now we are not there on saying to an AI the specific genre or mood or lyrics but in a gym for example you go on a playlist and just listen to music without knowing the artist or as is said before looking for the other track he/she made so unfortunately this is a topic that will simply develop on this "music on demand" because we are not more interested on a particular artist but just listen randomly music and as a producer this make really depress hope this make sense

  • @BurstupTV
    @BurstupTV Pƙed 2 dny

    As a producer of electronic music, I find myself jamming on synthesizers more. And as a DJ I scratch with vinyl. You can watch me do both these things on my channel. For me, it's a way to get away from
    controllers and DAWs, but also to show that my music is not produced and mixed with AI 😾

  • @_B.C_
    @_B.C_ Pƙed 25 dny +4

    I’m not afraid at all. I spent the last 10 years learning to reverse engineer the in the box producers but with a DAWless setup. I see AI music as a catalyst for adding value to the DAWless scene as it’s now a way to PROVE authenticity easily. I also see this creating a push for more DAWless artists to push past 4-8 bar loops and more in song mode sequencer structure territory.

    • @joao3547
      @joao3547 Pƙed 21 dnem +1

      what is your dawless setup?

    • @_B.C_
      @_B.C_ Pƙed 21 dnem +1

      @@joao3547 Squarp hapax as a sequencer brain, Roland mx1 for mixing, tr8s for drums, 7 various desktop synth modules and 9 guitar pedals, recorded by a 1010 blackbox. All cable managed like a guitar pedalboard in gators tsa 88 key piano case. I’ve been applying Alice’s bottom up arrangement method on the Hapax recently.

    • @allehooop
      @allehooop Pƙed 20 dny

      @@_B.C_it sounds like a nice set-up!
      Do you have any video of you performing?
      It would be nice to see you 😊

    • @_B.C_
      @_B.C_ Pƙed 20 dny

      @@allehooop not under this identity, sorry.

  • @sky3fallmusic
    @sky3fallmusic Pƙed 25 dny +16

    My own feeling is that it may become “the thing” for a while, and we will end up with a lot of guff, but ultimately there will be a backlash against it, and ‘real’ producers will be valued. It may mean taking on a larger in-person presence, but the audience likes the interpersonal connection. Try not to despair too much.

    • @AIsymphony-lo6de
      @AIsymphony-lo6de Pƙed 20 dny

      Didn't you hear her. The industry will use this. Now all they will do if they want live music they'll pay people only to sing. No writers, no musicians, no producers. Sorry
      Adapt or learn to use it.

    • @GRIFFYJAMS
      @GRIFFYJAMS Pƙed 17 dny +1

      Agreed. Even with these tools a skilled producer will still make a much better song than a random person. I think amazing songs will be made by using this as a way to prompt ideas. But copy pasting it sounds so generic. Artists need to step outside of the boxes AI is perfect at replicating.

    • @marcusplenty1153
      @marcusplenty1153 Pƙed 17 dny

      @@AIsymphony-lo6de On top of that, with AI voice emulators now those people dont even have to be well trained. Just apply that filter to the mic, and have a random dance that knows the words and suddenly you got a human counterpart to the AI Music

    • @marcusplenty1153
      @marcusplenty1153 Pƙed 17 dny

      On Top of that, this will basically kill streaming for mid to small sized artists. Labels will just flood spotify with AI music in order to capture more of the shared pool revenue. Since no human can keep up with the output of an AI, AI music will dilute the pool of payouts just due to sheer volume alone. So the averages artists payout is gonna drop massively, so now people who could make a decent living by streaming, will essentially be forced out of the game or forced to tour nonstop.

    • @AIsymphony-lo6de
      @AIsymphony-lo6de Pƙed 17 dny

      @marcusplenty1153. 👍 great point

  • @ranmadog72000
    @ranmadog72000 Pƙed 21 dnem +1

    I gonna catch the instruments with a stem separator, edit them with samplab and another sampler, and redo the vocals with a voice synth software, and, as producer, I will be in again! The A.I. plays, and I sample and flip what the A.I. plays to be still the producer!

  • @irvingforce
    @irvingforce Pƙed dnem

    Trying to avoid getting depressed to keep working but without being in denial. Tightrope balance act for sure with this

  • @ecabanero5776
    @ecabanero5776 Pƙed 25 dny +9

    I’ve been producing for 15 years, and I studied AI. Some partners of mind are telling me that music will be easy to create, but the reality is the essence and the art behind a track. You can think the same with the painting. Now people can create anything, but you learn that what you value the most is the things behind that idea. Prompts are useful for ideas or testing. But the reality is what makes us humans are impossible to be clone by AI.
    Use AI, tested, create new sound and new things but be confident in your abilities.
    Everyone can create music or learn to use a daw or a prompt, but they are capable of crafting something unique especial and fulfill of their essence and energy?

    • @tutubeos
      @tutubeos Pƙed 25 dny +5

      Are you sure that the vast majority of people, which are listening to dumber and dumber music, will be intellectually equipped to appreciate human art?
      I’m thinking about those millions of people already following AI influencers, millions calling “concerts” an empty stage with just a “singer” (mostly in playback or heavily dubbed), with pre-recorded music
 millions of “artists “ releasing music produced with samples, digital tools, zero music knowledge

      I’m afraid our path is pointing to a clear and very sad direction.

    • @Liminal-Mystic
      @Liminal-Mystic Pƙed 22 dny

      I just see it as I am the director or producer, and instead of hiring an actor, painter or band to create my ideas, I just direct the AI instead. Still requires a lot of work and vision.

  • @Cryrold
    @Cryrold Pƙed 25 dny +4

    I think AI music really shines where music needs to fulfill a certain role or certain expectations, e.g. in ads, film, games, background music in a gym, coffee house, basically anything where music itself isn’t the main focus.
    But when it comes to performing or even only listening to music for the sake of enjoying music, it‘ll quickly just sound the same to anyone. Or at least afaik, AI usually can’t really break out of it‘s own clichĂ©-oriented thinking and really create something innovative just on its own.
    So I guess we as musicians but also as a society need to ask ourselves more, when is music just there to be consumed like anything else and when is music there to be enjoyed

  • @cloudbeats4301
    @cloudbeats4301 Pƙed 20 dny

    A thing that keeps me optimistic ist the communication to AI and the fact that people like to follow people. The problem is explaining something you want as an outcome will be much harder than actually produce it in sum in the daw. You can tell to change it and it may sounds okay, but there is and i think there will be a huge gap between the control that a producer has and the AI ones. Implementing AI in the DAW may be the scariest thing that could change alot. But People will like to keep hearing their favourite Artist. And thats simply becouse there is a real person behind it, its just like social media influence.

  • @Nihbru
    @Nihbru Pƙed 25 dny

    yeah guessed right.. it's a tough thing to think about. On one hand it's a new tool and that's how we've always evolved, with new tools.. On the other hand, at least a small part of why I produce music is because not everyone can do it *could* - I went from being a dj to being a producer because I wanted my sets to be more unique / special and have something that no one's heard before. Dj'ing got killed for me when CDj's became the standard away from turn tables, the skill required was gone, and that made it less fun, less challenging and less special..

    • @sasitsu_bibamori
      @sasitsu_bibamori Pƙed 24 dny

      It's true that even using daw requires skill, not just a monkey pressing the "create" button. And if you play a real instrument, like a e-guitar, you're instantly better than 90% of hiphop producers and can make good money at it. Now AI will devalue all of that.

  • @PilzE.
    @PilzE. Pƙed 25 dny +12

    I was gonna say NOT to fear Alice, you have a loyal fanbase who will continue to follow and support you.
    But then, I am 53. The days of buying vinyl, even CDs, is but a distant memory. With steaming, torrents and file sharing, do the younger generations EVER buy music any more. My youngest, a 16-year-old lad, has adopted my passion for vinyl and spends all we allow him to on it.
    On further reflection, I guess my generation was just as bad, taping the radio, borrowing CDs to burn a copy, etc.
    Yeah, scary shizz for real.

    • @Alice-Efe
      @Alice-Efe  Pƙed 25 dny +6

      Aww thank you!
      I think we will just embrace whatever comes and adap to it.
      And become even better producers.
      All the best to you and to your young lad! 😊

    • @ddbb1977
      @ddbb1977 Pƙed 25 dny +1

      @@Alice-Efeyour words really give me the hope I was looking for..

    • @PilzE.
      @PilzE. Pƙed 25 dny +2

      @@Alice-Efe Thank you, Alice! đŸ€
      His tastes are EXTREMELY eclectic at present, from Hip Hop to 70s/80s rock/pop, through grunge and into RnB and soul. He hasn't really got the House/Techno/Dance bug as yet, and not for a lack of me pumping it through the house/garden/car at EVERY opportunity!
      He begins at Truro College in September, my last baby finishing school and moving into the world, but he is ridiculously intelligent and diligent in his studies and doesn't stop making us proud! Now, if we could just get him to accept the 4/4 groove...... đŸ€—

    • @danmanv3
      @danmanv3 Pƙed 22 dny

      @@Alice-Efe We will rise above this. There will always be issues with new tech. We will learn to exploit them.

  • @tshepotsotetsi7828
    @tshepotsotetsi7828 Pƙed 25 dny +8

    if they add the option to download stems it'll be a great way to get vocal samplesđŸ”„

    • @artephank
      @artephank Pƙed 25 dny +1

      Already tried it. The quality is not there. I feel like those AI songs are missing a lot more than just top end phasing. When you convert them to steams (with use of AI of course:) none of the steams is usable really. I wonder if it is not like our brain just fill up gaps of frequencies that are just not there. If so, it might be it will never be able to get into production level - just like you cannot upscale badly compressed mp3

    • @ihsankoksal430
      @ihsankoksal430 Pƙed 25 dny +1

      Yeah, the only thing that holds this back from usability is the lack of downloadable stems, or the ability to create acapella. Its own output is fine for self-entertainment and memes but the quality is so low that I don't see an actual professional intended use for this yet. Once they come up with a solution, it will be a game changer.

    • @stevensmith1788
      @stevensmith1788 Pƙed 25 dny +1

      Yes but this is as worse as it will ever be

    • @ET_AYY_LMAO
      @ET_AYY_LMAO Pƙed 25 dny +3

      I want a VSTi where I can give it a prompt for a sound and it will invent it like "Cyborg pidgeon scream choir" or "rusty bicycle percussion", that would be cool and open up for human creativity...

  • @cemkarakiz
    @cemkarakiz Pƙed 5 dny

    Than you, Do something that no one else has done, a glossary of music terms. I think you should even make a content on composer terms for organizing music infrastructure đŸ™‹đŸ»â€â™‚ïžđŸ‘

  • @karmachronicles
    @karmachronicles Pƙed 17 dny

    The experience of live music, is going to be a spiritual transformation for many. They will start to feel what means " feeling the waves of musical creativity", a nurturing process, a unique moment where eternity and present time encounter. This is what I feel when I play live music, improvisation thru inspirational moods. To offer a unique piece of immortality.

  • @solarj
    @solarj Pƙed 25 dny +24

    I guessed right :)
    You can tell because, a parte the small audio glitches, there is no originality in AI composition. There’s no unique sound design. It learned to reproduce a musical vibe and tracks that are already there, in large amounts needed for training. Maybe It’s gonna change the mainstream industry but the underground, more experimental one is maybe going to benefit from AI?

    • @michaelsimpson9175
      @michaelsimpson9175 Pƙed 23 dny +1

      give it a few months.... :)

    • @dennisg967
      @dennisg967 Pƙed 22 dny +4

      How do you think people learn? You truly think we create completely original music? Every "original" piece is just a modification of what we heard before because every creation is based on past knowledge

    • @Disconnected66
      @Disconnected66 Pƙed 22 dny

      @@dennisg967 This is objectively not even remotely the same thing as a machine learning algorithm that can scoop up every single song that has ever existed on a platform and use that resource to effectively utilize the sum of an actual database to inform decisions
      you are quite literally saying "HUMANS LEARN BY LEARNING THINGS, AND SO DO COMPUTERS, SO WE ARE THE SAME AS COMPUTERS"
      every single aspect of technology that ISN'T AI is PROVABLY opposed to what you just said. And that's WITHOUT ai LMFAO
      why do you actually choose to be this fucking stupid?

    • @solarj
      @solarj Pƙed 22 dny +2

      @@dennisg967 people learn in a very different way compared to ML models :) VERY different - I do data science for a living. E.g. do you need to see a bottle 1000 times in different variants to know what is a bottle?
      Also while I agree that new music is rooted into old music I think human brains have a unique way of extending the known into the unknown. If you train a neural network with a bunch of songs from slavery times do you think the network will come up with jazz and blues?I bet it will come up with more variations of slavery songs.

    • @nicotilda
      @nicotilda Pƙed 21 dnem

      people said the same with midjourney, then everybody starts using it :)

  • @cgibeats
    @cgibeats Pƙed 25 dny +4

    it doesn't actually create the music itself, it just takes elements from existing songs which it has been trained on and randomly mixes them together( often using the same melody but replaces the instrument ). If you pay attention you will recognise some of them . Cool as an app on your phone and all, but, uploading these songs on streaming platforms or selling them in stores should be illegal.

    • @Esteban-pb4gw
      @Esteban-pb4gw Pƙed 22 dny

      Not that simple

    • @squealerpig8451
      @squealerpig8451 Pƙed 5 dny

      You can't sell them. Every time it generates a song it goes in its database. Even if you re record the song yourself, the company will still know.

  • @audiodiggers4585
    @audiodiggers4585 Pƙed 25 dny

    Thanks for your view on AI music. AI music doesn’t sound hifi yet to me, but it’s getting close. Samples companies have more competition now too, for example for vocal and instrumental samples and phrases made by AI. The user just fills in the text and off you go with stuff for your own productions. Did you also check out the RipX AI DAW software? It’s kind like an advanced Melodyne, incredible software.

  • @chriswoodward8127
    @chriswoodward8127 Pƙed 8 dny +1

    this issue currently is that the sound quality is really poor. you couldn't play that quality out as it would sound terrible on a good sound system. however, im sure they're working on having WAV sounding files and it will become much more personalised - eg i want a break at 1m30s with a hint of the main synth coming in....main break at 3m30s where the full sythn comes in. also need to be able to say i want it from a 909 drum machine tuned like this etc etc. until you have that at WAV quality it's just fun and games

  • @mariusle3385
    @mariusle3385 Pƙed 25 dny +4

    To point in making music is to express yourself and having fun on the process and not to compete. So it doesnt matter

    • @nikodoyon7429
      @nikodoyon7429 Pƙed 25 dny

      where is the fun?

    • @mariusle3385
      @mariusle3385 Pƙed 25 dny +2

      @@nikodoyon7429 then its maybe not the right thing for you

    • @nikodoyon7429
      @nikodoyon7429 Pƙed 24 dny

      @@mariusle3385 no you didnt understand , where is the fun if ai make it for you

    • @mariusle3385
      @mariusle3385 Pƙed 22 dny

      @@nikodoyon7429 if you do music for yourself, why would u let it do it by an Ai? Doesnt make sense

    • @nikodoyon7429
      @nikodoyon7429 Pƙed 10 dny

      @@mariusle3385 10:45

  • @iaincampbell5094
    @iaincampbell5094 Pƙed 16 dny

    I’m with you on this journey, you’ve helped me on mine.
    Documentary the AI music revolution, it’s a once in a lifetime opportunity. Make incredible music beyond any previous conception using these tools, we’ll be watching and supporting.

  • @rgorskin
    @rgorskin Pƙed 25 dny

    This is amazing!

  • @analitykapsychiatryczna
    @analitykapsychiatryczna Pƙed 25 dny +4

    not to mention that now anyone can make music. people, regardless of whether they make good or bad music, want to exist in this world so hard and want mean something so much that they create music for free anyway, so what's the difference? this market is broken anyway

  • @eelcostuy4641
    @eelcostuy4641 Pƙed 25 dny +3

    I'm not that scared. AI will always be copying the things that humans came up with before. So, in a way, this will motivate artists to come up with new things to stay relevant. I see this as a motivation to stay original.

    • @MeanderingNL
      @MeanderingNL Pƙed 21 dnem

      Not really, it indeed uses real data from real musicians and producers, but it does create from what it has learned (Learning is kinda what most musicians and producers have to do as well before they can make something decent, natural prodigies excluded).
      Don't get me wrong: it creates, I don't think it is creative (which is a human property)
      But...
      Do you think people care who or what created a tune they like? Same question again, musicians, producers etc need to be paid: creative track costs $2.99 the AI track costs $0.10. Very few people will say, let's support the humans. I HOPE I am wrong
      Why do you think actors are scared to death that they or their uniqueness is being copied?
      Pretty soon Elvis will sing again and most people will have no idea (or care?)
      I suggest you maybe should be scared?

    • @squealerpig8451
      @squealerpig8451 Pƙed 5 dny

      ​@@MeanderingNL dude Elvis has been singing in Vegas for years

    • @MeanderingNL
      @MeanderingNL Pƙed 5 dny

      ​@@squealerpig8451
      Odd, last I heard was the ghost of Elvis being seen on Union Avenue.
      Someone followed him up to the gates of Graceland and watched him walk right through.
      Apparently security did not see him, they just hovered 'round his tomb.
      But there's a pretty little thing, waiting for the king, down in the Jungle Room.

  • @thedoctor5478
    @thedoctor5478 Pƙed 25 dny +17

    Don't be scared. Embrace it. I'm biased because I'm a software engineer & owner of an AI company but I love producing house. Consider the possibilities. Consider that the record labels are more scared than you are. I believe a new level of quality will emerge. The AI will create decent tracks, and you (Being a pro producer) will use the AI to help you make even better tracks than everyone else can make themselves or generate with AI. To make truly exceptional music requires the language of music production. There are more technical reasons for me thinking this which I won't get into much here. Sufficive to say you are still needed. I 100% recommend learning all the new AI tools. There are many more (Many free/open-source and super cheap) than you showed.

    • @Alice-Efe
      @Alice-Efe  Pƙed 25 dny +8

      I think this is the only way forward.
      Embrace it and become even better producer.
      All the best to you!

    • @EntropyExhaustion
      @EntropyExhaustion Pƙed 25 dny +1

      Nope. It's simple. Generative AI abuses content without asking. It's basically the same bs move like search engines did in the past - they abused the content of the people to sell advertizing and ripp of everybody without asking ... "embrace it" is just neoliberal propaganda.
      I don't want that arbitrary AI companies use any content for training purpose without asking. Unbelievable that this seems acceptable to anyone at all.

    • @thedoctor5478
      @thedoctor5478 Pƙed 24 dny

      @@Alice-Efe I'd like to drop you an invite to our private beta. I'm working to add AI producer features, and I've long valued your opinions. Any feedback could make a huge difference. You're a god-tier producer compared to me. I'd try to add any producer features you say you want.

    • @1wibble230
      @1wibble230 Pƙed 23 dny

      You’re talking about transitional stage using AI as a tool, but it’s already reaching the stage you can create an entire quality track from just a text prompt, this removes the need for the artist all together, labels and streaming services no longer need producers. Scary times ahead, let’s see what happens

    • @thedoctor5478
      @thedoctor5478 Pƙed 22 dny

      ​@@1wibble230 My favorite things about house music, the things that make the tracks I love the most, 'good' are things I have yet to hear in any AI-generated song. It's dancing on the edge of order & chaos. It's not that I don't think they could do but I doubt they can without being explicitly prompted how to, and that prompting is in the language of music production for the foreseeable future.
      The amount of compute required to get the 30 seconds of output udio provides is enormous, and it doesn't capture the magic I speak of in a single one of the tracks I've listened to. To train for that for multiple minutes of required audio output would probably cost hundreds of millions of dollars, and the result still probably wouldn't be as good as you'd want.
      If instead someone trains a model to be a producer's assistant, there's no limit to the amount of gold one could spin from straw with it.

  • @nofood1
    @nofood1 Pƙed 22 dny +1

    the voice on the Death Metal tracks are INSANE, crispy clean

  • @midiminion6580
    @midiminion6580 Pƙed 2 dny

    i think that last 1-5% is going to be really hard for AI to figure out. That fuziness on top. Same with the fingers on graphics.

  • @robvermeulen
    @robvermeulen Pƙed 23 dny +1

    One of the perks of making music is the appreciation of your fans. Yes, making music itself is a big part of the joy but let's be honest, we love to get the compliments and to see others dance to your sounds. If your music won't be played or danced to because AI tracks are considered better, that would be quite the horror. As much as I love to dive in my studio and create some tracks on my own, having other people listen to them and appreciate them (and stream them ;)) is the actual icing on the cake as well as the bread and butter we've been earning. I share your concern! But I am also very curious to what's next. Such a ambiguous sentiment.

    • @squealerpig8451
      @squealerpig8451 Pƙed 5 dny

      Problem is people can use ai and just record it themselves and say they made it

  • @1101x10
    @1101x10 Pƙed 23 dny +2

    I created a couple of complete songs on Suno and played them in a bar. No one knew they were created by AI. It creates catchy and accomplished music and although the audio quality is not quite there yet it is only a matter of time.
    Music style changes though over the years. What will happen to this. Will it still need real people to do this or will it innovate itself.

    • @squealerpig8451
      @squealerpig8451 Pƙed 5 dny

      Only need people for live performances but music will be a thing of the past in future generations

  • @michaelwinkler7841
    @michaelwinkler7841 Pƙed 4 dny

    It‘s like with in many other areas
 an architect will not be replaced by ai. But by an architect knowing how to use ai. That it‘s similar with music, we can already tell by listening to the tracks that are created with suno on the suno subreddit. Yes, they sound technically good (often). But the vast majority sounds just generic. Tracks that make you go aah, this is really good music are very rare and i think they are done by people who already know how to make good music

  • @NatalieDemary
    @NatalieDemary Pƙed 4 dny

    As a future pop & traphouse producer (under Sera Hyndulla), I would love to know where those infographics came from 🙏

  • @herbertchepsoy6857
    @herbertchepsoy6857 Pƙed 8 dny +1

    Came after chat gpt was reading me a custom text and I felt like a person was reading it to me, I am an IT guy ,I was skeptical about how good AI was going to be with language processing and for the first time I am scared. We are making a dangerous entity.

    • @kamakiapeter7815
      @kamakiapeter7815 Pƙed 18 hodinami

      As a decades programmer Ai is actually for us. You probably have not understood that as yet. Chat gpt is not a competitor. It's a free programmer assistant.

  • @AngelEowyn
    @AngelEowyn Pƙed 19 dny +2

    I have mixed feelings towards AI in general. I think if you approach it responsibly then it's ok. It can be a great tool. I lost my voice (long story) and had resigned myself to the fact that I could never write songs with lyrics again but then I discovered AI Vocals and because of this, I am back to writing songs with lyrics and I am eternally grateful for AI re-opening these doors for me. However, my issue is how people are using AI on a mass scale and basically throwing all of us "small fish" out of the water. People are using it literally to just lazily earn money or save money.

  • @user-ey5lx3zw8u
    @user-ey5lx3zw8u Pƙed 11 dny +1

    Does any of these tools accept audio as a prompt? Like, maybe submiting a mockup of a song and have it instrumented and well produced by the a.i.

  • @EricKay_Scifi
    @EricKay_Scifi Pƙed 2 dny

    First ChatGPT came for the copywriters, and I did not speak out- Because I was not a copywriter.
    Then MidJourney came for the graphic designers, and I did not speak out- Because I was not a graphic designer.
    Then Udio came for the musicians, and I did not speak out- Because I was not a musician.
    Then AI came for me-and there was no one left to speak for me.

  • @GodsUnrulyFriends
    @GodsUnrulyFriends Pƙed 3 dny

    I tried a few of these AI music generating apps. The results were unimpressive, but that's probably because I entered prompts such as "Hybrid song combining Mahavishnu Orchestra and early Queen." or "Jimi Hendrix playing with the London Symphony Orchestra."
    You are absolutely right that this can pose a threat to musicians. Our only option is to use AI in a way that enhances our own music, and to promote awareness that our music is superior to the cookie-cutter music AI generates

  • @aykuterdeem
    @aykuterdeem Pƙed 16 dny

    I don't know what ai will take from us, but I'd like to focus on what they can give. First of all, if this website can give us only acapella without beat, it's a great thing

  • @champion75
    @champion75 Pƙed 25 dny

    Yaptığın mĂŒziğe,dĂŒĆŸĂŒnce tarzına, hayal gĂŒcĂŒne bayılıyorum baƟarılar diliyorum.

  • @RomanRoman-ct3dj
    @RomanRoman-ct3dj Pƙed dnem

    I'm doing music production and writing songs as hobby. But my main job is working with AI, however not with a music one. I've seen it's coming after appearing image generation models. But I didn't expect it's so soon. I feel myself like Alice - it's scary, it's fantasic and fun same time. The good point of it that AI is improving so fast, so we will be able to see its miracles during our lifetimes. Another good point for all artistic people that generative AI can't be trained without human content, yet.
    What else I can say? It's inevitable, and there's nothing we can do about it. Should we stop progress? I don't think so. Did photography destroyed painting? Yeah, in some part. But art is adapted and is still here. Same thing will happen with coming of new tools and technologies.
    CZcams and TikTok and music streaming services gave ability to create content to anyone. I think that image-music-video generation is just next step, next door that will be opened to talanted people.
    Let's embrace the future and all cool things it will bring to us.

  • @TheHouseOfHipHop
    @TheHouseOfHipHop Pƙed 7 dny

    In today's dance scene, reliance on pre-recorded mixes and samples is killing creativity. The true threat isn't AI; it's DJs unable to mix without a sync button or producers relying solely on sample banks. It's time for genuine talent and creativity to reclaim the spotlight through a revolutionary change.

  • @grindedfranz
    @grindedfranz Pƙed 21 dnem

    Love your vids!

  • @Petran892
    @Petran892 Pƙed 25 dny +2

    How the f does it Synthesize such realistic vocals and guitars?

  • @dhightone6755
    @dhightone6755 Pƙed 8 dny +1

    What will really impress us is if an AI program can reproduce the voice and singing style of a good opera singer, including a medium-rate, full-length-of-the-note, operatic singing vibrato. Maybe showcase this in a future CZcams video for both a male voice and a female voice.

    • @spark300c
      @spark300c Pƙed 5 dny

      well only problem that demand for good opera singers synths is not there. so a company is not going try to spend money recording a opera singer. zerog make voice bank that was opera singer named prima. that vocaloid 2 which kind sound some what primitive now to modern vocal synths.

  • @niravelniflheim1858
    @niravelniflheim1858 Pƙed 12 hodinami

    That is absolutely insane. Hit up GPT to iterate the perfect lyrics, throw them into one of these... yeah, "music on demand". Ironically, I'm watching Eurovision right now and of course that's all about the live performances, which reminds me also of seeing bands at small venues playing live, whether it's a club or a pub, and I don't imagine that going anywhere. If anything, we are going to be getting more music than ever.