The Day the Music Changed — And Nobody Noticed

AI music isn’t marginal—it’s infinite. Labels help, but don’t solve the
economics. The industry will adapt, but its structure will never be the same.

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Last week, an AI-generated track hit number one on iTunes in the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Canada, and New Zealand simultaneously.

Not a song with AI-assisted production. Not a human artist who used AI tools in the mixing process. A fully AI-generated track — no songwriter, no singer, no musician, no studio session, no story behind it — sitting at the top of the charts in five countries at once.

This happened quietly. Without much ceremony. Without the cultural reckoning you might expect from a moment that would have seemed unthinkable five years ago. It was noted, discussed briefly, and the conversation moved on. Which is, in its own way, the most revealing part of the story.

When a milestone arrives and the world mostly shrugs, it usually means one of two things: either the milestone wasn’t as significant as it seemed, or it was so significant that people don’t yet have a framework for processing what it means.

This is the second kind.

Continue reading… “The Day the Music Changed — And Nobody Noticed”

Amazon’s AI creates synthesized singers

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AI and machine learning algorithms are quite skilled at generating works of art — and highly realistic images of apartments, people, and pets to boot. But relatively few have been tuned to singing synthesis, or the task of cloning musicians’ voices.

Researchers from Amazon and Cambridge put their collective minds to the challenge in a recent paper in which they propose an AI system that requires “considerably” less modeling than previous work of features like vibratos and note durations. It taps a Google-designed algorithm — WaveNet — to synthesize the mel-spectrograms, or representations of the power spectrum of sounds, which another model produces using a combination of speech and signing data.

Continue reading… “Amazon’s AI creates synthesized singers”