Well this was going to happen sooner or later. Best crack on and deal with it now.
YoungGazz on
BBC Introducting to be rebranded as *Top of the Slops.*
Freebornaiden on
Inevitable. It may be “disrespectful” but if a kid with an AI prompt is ‘making’ better music than seasoned musicians then the ship is already sailing.
RecentTwo544 on
Said this in another thread –
This isn’t a threat to good musicians, it’s more showing up just how awful some of the submissions to BBC Introducing are that still get played while some local radio DJ says, lies, that they’re “going to be the next big thing”.
I checked out the artist quoted as being upset by this in the BBC article, and the music is beyond appalling and they have barely any followers on social media (and lots of bought ones on Instagram).
In short, if your music is on the same level as “AI” created music, give it up and get a job.
This is why we need more Simon Cowell types (before he was turned into a fake pantomime villain) and less false encouragement for musicians/artists.
zenithpns on
No wonder I sent off four different songs to BBC Introducing and received zero acknowledgement that they’d even been considered, they were clearly too busy deciding how to be as artistically bankrupt as possible
doctorgibson on
Agreed. We should also ban drum machines for taking real work away from real drummers
SableSnail on
The music industry’s been running on fumes since the death of the compact disk and the insanely high margins they could charge.
Look at any new popular band and they’re likely a bunch of poshos picked by hand for success by the record label.
Meanwhile, loads of incredibly talented bands struggle to make any money whatsoever.
The AI stuff is worse but it’s all been slop for years.
Anony_mouse202 on
So?
If the AI generated music genuinely does sound better than the non-AI alternatives then so what?
8 commenti
Well this was going to happen sooner or later. Best crack on and deal with it now.
BBC Introducting to be rebranded as *Top of the Slops.*
Inevitable. It may be “disrespectful” but if a kid with an AI prompt is ‘making’ better music than seasoned musicians then the ship is already sailing.
Said this in another thread –
This isn’t a threat to good musicians, it’s more showing up just how awful some of the submissions to BBC Introducing are that still get played while some local radio DJ says, lies, that they’re “going to be the next big thing”.
I checked out the artist quoted as being upset by this in the BBC article, and the music is beyond appalling and they have barely any followers on social media (and lots of bought ones on Instagram).
In short, if your music is on the same level as “AI” created music, give it up and get a job.
This is why we need more Simon Cowell types (before he was turned into a fake pantomime villain) and less false encouragement for musicians/artists.
No wonder I sent off four different songs to BBC Introducing and received zero acknowledgement that they’d even been considered, they were clearly too busy deciding how to be as artistically bankrupt as possible
Agreed. We should also ban drum machines for taking real work away from real drummers
The music industry’s been running on fumes since the death of the compact disk and the insanely high margins they could charge.
Look at any new popular band and they’re likely a bunch of poshos picked by hand for success by the record label.
Meanwhile, loads of incredibly talented bands struggle to make any money whatsoever.
The AI stuff is worse but it’s all been slop for years.
So?
If the AI generated music genuinely does sound better than the non-AI alternatives then so what?