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AI Music: Soulless Algorithm or a New Form of Art?

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Manage episode 496054851 series 3670994
Content provided by Ran Chen. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ran Chen or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
In this episode, we dive into one of the most compelling questions in modern creativity: Can AI compose music that feels genuinely human? We explore the arguments for and against the emotional capacity of algorithms, looking at whether the origin of music matters if the listener's emotional response is real. We move beyond abstract theory to examine how AI is already shaping the music industry. This isn't just about robots replacing composers; it's about a new era of human-machine collaboration. From AI systems being registered as official composers to technology that restores lost voices from the past, we uncover how this partnership is changing what's possible in music. Case Study: Think about the 'final' Beatles song, 'Now and Then.' AI was used to extract John Lennon's voice from a noisy demo tape from the 1970s. The result is a deeply moving track that brought many to tears. Was the emotion purely from Lennon's original performance, or did the AI's flawless restoration play a role in delivering that feeling to a modern audience? It highlights the pain point of losing history to poor-quality recordings and how AI offers a powerful, almost magical solution. Key Takeaways: 1. If an AI song makes you cry, does the algorithm's lack of consciousness matter? 2. Is AI a threat to human musicians, or the most powerful collaborative tool ever created? 3. What happens when an AI like AIVA is officially registered as a composer? 4. Can functional music, like AI-generated soundscapes for focus, be considered emotionally intelligent? 5. How did AI make the "final" Beatles song possible, and what does this mean for music history? 6. Are we judging AI music fairly, or are we biased by knowing its origin? 7. When AI generates music, who is the real author: the programmer, the AI, or the user who provides the prompt? Follow my YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@chenran818 or listen to my music on Apple music, Spotify or other platforms: https://ffm.bio/chenran818
  continue reading

53 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 496054851 series 3670994
Content provided by Ran Chen. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ran Chen or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
In this episode, we dive into one of the most compelling questions in modern creativity: Can AI compose music that feels genuinely human? We explore the arguments for and against the emotional capacity of algorithms, looking at whether the origin of music matters if the listener's emotional response is real. We move beyond abstract theory to examine how AI is already shaping the music industry. This isn't just about robots replacing composers; it's about a new era of human-machine collaboration. From AI systems being registered as official composers to technology that restores lost voices from the past, we uncover how this partnership is changing what's possible in music. Case Study: Think about the 'final' Beatles song, 'Now and Then.' AI was used to extract John Lennon's voice from a noisy demo tape from the 1970s. The result is a deeply moving track that brought many to tears. Was the emotion purely from Lennon's original performance, or did the AI's flawless restoration play a role in delivering that feeling to a modern audience? It highlights the pain point of losing history to poor-quality recordings and how AI offers a powerful, almost magical solution. Key Takeaways: 1. If an AI song makes you cry, does the algorithm's lack of consciousness matter? 2. Is AI a threat to human musicians, or the most powerful collaborative tool ever created? 3. What happens when an AI like AIVA is officially registered as a composer? 4. Can functional music, like AI-generated soundscapes for focus, be considered emotionally intelligent? 5. How did AI make the "final" Beatles song possible, and what does this mean for music history? 6. Are we judging AI music fairly, or are we biased by knowing its origin? 7. When AI generates music, who is the real author: the programmer, the AI, or the user who provides the prompt? Follow my YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@chenran818 or listen to my music on Apple music, Spotify or other platforms: https://ffm.bio/chenran818
  continue reading

53 episodes

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