The Beatles’ final song, restored using AI, is up for a Grammy
YouTube previewed a tool to use generative AI to replace copyrighted music from your videos without affecting anything else. A few years ago this would have been expensive and time-consuming if it was even possible - soon it will just be a button. This is the natural life cycle of all ‘AI’. LINK, VIDEO
Benedict Evans • Benedict's Newsletter: No. 548
Jimmy Cerone added
Not sure if this is the most positive, but like images, I’m using more and the production value of all my stuff is improving thanks to AI.
As AI Finds Its Voice, Music Communities Must Strengthen Theirs (Guest Column)
billboard.comMaarten added
Creative approaches to AI music
Google and Universal Music might license artists' voices for AI-generated music
Cecily Mauranmashable.commadisen added
How AI Can Help Reshape the Music Industry by Doing More of the Little Things (Guest Column)
Rufy Anam Ghazibillboard.comBut if you listen to outtakes from the sessions, you can hear the Beatles worked out harmonies for “Eight Days a Week”—beautiful harmonies, in fact. Yet they cut the harmonies and sang in unison, to make the song sound like it took less work than it did. They spent seven hours in the studio tinkering with “Eight Days a Week,” adding and subtracting
... See moreRob Sheffield • Dreaming the Beatles
Maarten added
a more artist-led approach to the immense wealth of our own human collective intelligence.
Adobe scolded for selling ‘Ansel Adams-style’ images generated by AI
theverge.comJustin Mather added
The other insidious side of this whole battle is that these large companies are going to start selling this generated content to people as stock imagery