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I hate to be annoying (really) but this has been the case for decades with artists and their work because they function within the music industry or publishing and they don’t have editorial control. They never did. This is nothing to do with A I and is giving credence to something that has all the hall marks of a moral panic.

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I'm gonna say what I always say about the "dead artists coming back with AI" thing:

Once the novelty wears off (+/- 6 months; by 2023 standards), listeners will only hear the hands of the profiteers who pump out the ghoulish drivel those bits of "content" will be. They, after all, or their flat-rate contractors will be writing the compositions, and they will not stand up to the live artist's original works qualitatively at all.

Remember, music is *made*; manure is "produced". The profiteers will ruin AI as a viable music generator (except for limited use-cases) within a couple years; through either saturation of low-effort low-quality "product", or competitive sabotage of each other's data models. When that goes down, you can still go see Taylor Swift, or Molchat Doma, or Trombone Shorty, or come have a few beers with any of my bands. Those experiences cannot be stolen or duplicated by any wanna-be Turing or Yetnikoff, however hard they try.

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Phil Collins released a song called, "A groovy kind of love" in 1988. The first recording was done by a duo called Diane and Annita and covered in 1965 by a British group called The Mindbenders. It was written by Carol Bayer Sager and Toni Wine. This always makes students of classical music chuckle because it's a direct and acknowledged lift from Muzio Clemente. So much so that whenever it gets played, this 1797 piece is always referred to by us as "a groovy kind of love" Clemente liked Haydn and Mozart and did 'arrangements' of their work. Everyone has done it, and in most cases the new spin on an old tune has brought something out. Then there is plagiarism. It is no coincidence that Hotel California, by The Eagles, came out shortly after they supported Jethro Tull, whose song, "We used to know" bears an uncanny resemblance.

But why the panic about AI? I have heard a few of these and frankly, they sound like lift music; glib copies of the Vox Humana. If you are telling me that AI will one day replicate the experience, the emotion, the delivery and the soul of a singer like Ella Fitgerald or Laura Nyro, I have to say that I cannot believe you. It's as crass as photoshopping the head of your least favourite politician on to a nude body.

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I feel there perhaps might be some misrepresentation regarding the effects of AI on music.

It's not so much just a fad that will pass, it is primarily that it adds to the volumes of distractions already in our lives forming barriers against discovering and investing in new music (or any other art)...and it all adds up.

I want a reverse "I am not a robot" test for anything that passes my attention because I don't have any interest in algorithm generated content

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