Exactly.Rick is addressing the apparent dominance of a platform called Sunno for AI music creation in this video.
I think he's being naive, based on an historical perspective though. Pick an industry and the companies which dominated the market early on, more often than not, fall by the wayside (i.e., RCA, AOL, Radioshack, TWA, you could go on and on).
The problem is they will probably not know/notice it is...I dont think people really want to listen to AI music. I know I don't
Yeah it wasn't the take I expected when I saw the video title, and based on some of his previous criticisms of AI. It does have the potential of being a great tool to enhance song writing and production.Exactly.
He's also pointing out that in some contexts, AI is being used for music creation pretty frequently. Based on the limited circle of musicians I'm in contact with, mostly the folks here, i wouldn't have thought that was the case. To put it differently, the disrespect it mostly gets here isn't universal.
Or to put it differently, people's workflows prioritize different things, and for some, AI comes up as efficient and "good enough".Exactly.
He's also pointing out that in some contexts, AI is being used for music creation pretty frequently. Based on the limited circle of musicians I'm in contact with, mostly the folks here, i wouldn't have thought that was the case. To put it differently, the disrespect it mostly gets here isn't universal.
scarcely likely it is Sony because Sony was one of several labels that initiate proceeding because of usage their records for learning of suno generation algoritms. The process was initiated an year ago but, nothing new known on todaySuno and Sony (i think it was sony) partnered up.
In the video I posted, It was definitely needed to get Scott Stapp to sing Rudolph, the Red-nosed Reindeer in the style of “Higher.”And re: mashups etc, humans have been doing that for years. Look up Mac Glocky. No AI needed.
