Since AI Music platforms like Udio and Suno have been getting a lot of attention lately, I wanted to get some Hexbears' opinions on the matter. Have any of you been testing the capabilities of these? Care to share what you've made?
Udio seems to be trained on a wider range of niche genres, which I think leads to more diverse sounds that are better at obscuring their AI origins. Suno has a much more limited mainstream range, but you can make an entire concept album by extending clips multiple times before you 'get the whole song'. You can also finely tune each clip by choosing to extend it very early into the clip to pick out the best parts (though at that point, why not just make the music yourself?)
So far I've been using Udio to get more diverse samples, combined with an AI music splitter to isolate the good parts. I then plug them into Suno-generated long tracks to augment limitations from the prompting process. The music still isn't great (and my editing skills are dirt poor) but I think interesting things can get created this way. Soundcloud link to some example tracks
Adam Neely just released a decent video about AI music and what it lacks, and so even though the critique of capitalist art production that he suggests is pretty milquetoast, I'd recommend it as a mild antidote to all the AI music hype.
Only thing I know for sure is that this is an absolute banger.
I think for me the horrifying thing and threat is less that AI can scramble together enough noise to make this and more that we might move to a world where an actual human being feels no need to do so. Art is a human endeavor not because human beings need to consume content but rather because human beings I believe have a need to create things. Where does this leave the artist under capitalism though when someone can just spit these out of a computer?
I agree with the take that this is a call to arms to decommodify all this shit. Upholding copyright law is bass ackwards and a complete deadend.
I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy: