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posted by hubie on Wednesday April 03 2024, @01:22AM   Printer-friendly
from the Wo-Yao-Ni-De-AI dept.

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/suno-ai-chatgpt-for-music-1234982307/

I'm just a soul trapped in this circuitry." The voice singing those lyrics is raw and plaintive, dipping into blue notes. A lone acoustic guitar chugs behind it, punctuating the vocal phrases with tasteful runs. But there's no human behind the voice, no hands on that guitar. There is, in fact, no guitar. In the space of 15 seconds, this credible, even moving, blues song was generated by the latest AI model from a startup named Suno. All it took to summon it from the void was a simple text prompt: "solo acoustic Mississippi Delta blues about a sad AI." To be maximally precise, the song is the work of two AI models in collaboration: Suno's model creates all the music itself, while calling on OpenAI's ChatGPT to generate the lyrics and even a title: "Soul of the Machine."

[...] Over the past year alone, generative AI has made major strides in producing credible text, images (via services like Midjourney), and even video, particularly with OpenAI's new Sora tool. But audio, and music in particular, has lagged. Suno appears to be cracking the code to AI music, and its founders' ambitions are nearly limitless — they imagine a world of wildly democratized music making. The most vocal of the co-founders, Mikey Shulman, a boyishly charming, backpack-toting 37-year-old with a Harvard Ph.D. in physics, envisions a billion people worldwide paying 10 bucks a month to create songs with Suno. The fact that music listeners so vastly outnumber music-makers at the moment is "so lopsided," he argues, seeing Suno as poised to fix that perceived imbalance.


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by Thexalon on Wednesday April 03 2024, @03:57AM (2 children)

    by Thexalon (636) on Wednesday April 03 2024, @03:57AM (#1351450)

    The part about wildly democratic music making sounds good.

    I'm a believer in the idea that if you give people the time and materials that allow them to make art of any kind, they will do it without much if any prompting from anybody. Look at what happened during Covid with millions of people stuck in their own homes with enough money to get by and no work they had to be doing, and you'll get an idea of what humans will do voluntarily when the opportunity presents itself. Or alternately, look at how retirees keep themselves busy, and you'll see what people will do when they aren't constrained by a daily grind.

    --
    "Think of how stupid the average person is. Then realize half of 'em are stupider than that." - George Carlin
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  • (Score: 2) by Freeman on Wednesday April 03 2024, @01:55PM (1 child)

    by Freeman (732) on Wednesday April 03 2024, @01:55PM (#1351487) Journal

    look at how retirees keep themselves busy

    What does the occupation of "Walmart greeter" have to do with anything? Don't worry, my wife wanted to do a grocery delivery the other day. An older couple delivered the groceries. Pretty sure they're not just doing that for the kicks, then again, maybe I just see the fun in grocery delivery.

    --
    Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"
    • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Thursday April 04 2024, @02:35AM

      by Thexalon (636) on Thursday April 04 2024, @02:35AM (#1351593)

      Right, those people aren't retired, they're old and couldn't afford to retire because America sucks at the whole concept of "taking care of other people".

      Although I did remember one elderly Walmart greeter who was allowed by management to bring his violin to work, and he would make lovely music for everyone shopping, just for kicks. It was far better than listening to the canned music over the PA system, certainly.

      --
      "Think of how stupid the average person is. Then realize half of 'em are stupider than that." - George Carlin