AI

Blog: AI Songwriting Apps; A Boon For Writers Or A Stain On The Industry?

Oh man, I’m really going to be throwing myself to the wolves on this one…

Let’s talk about AI in music!

INTRODUCTION

A couple of months ago I put out a follower questionnaire asking folks what they wanted me to write about. It was basically a “what do you all want to hear my tangent-esque thoughts & feelings on?” This initial blog to come out of it was actually the inception of the ‘Geek Out’ series, which unfortunately I haven’t done that much with. The rest of the responses I go I submitted into the “content” folder of the notes app on my phone & I give a peek to on the days when I’m struggling to think of something to write. This week that wasn’t the case, as today’s topic has been nagging my brain all week, but it definitely plays into a prompt that was requested of me by one Alejandro David Cabeza. Alejandro requested that I write on my feelings around “Art, Film, AI, & The Human Experience” & I want to use that to bridge the gap between this request & what has been going on in my life for the last couple of weeks.

I want to talk today about a certain app or type of apps, specifically the one that I am familiar with, Suno. If you’re unfamiliar, Suno is an AI music app that has been circulating the music circles for a couple of months now. The app can do a number of things. It can take a work tape or a demo & turn it into a ‘fully produced’ song in a matter of minutes just by inputting a prompt & a style on how you want the project to sound. The app also goes a step further & can full on create music from the millions of hours of music it has sampled off of nothing more than a prompt. For example, I could tell Suno I want an Acid Rock song about Gary, Indiana & it would spit one out for me. I find the second aspect of this a lot more troubling than the first, but I want to focus most of my attention today on the former example of the application’s use. Naturally I will be playing a bit of devil’s advocate here, but I’m also going to break this down into two separate pros & cons sections. I’m not going to leave you with a definitive “I think this is good or bad” because in all fairness & honesty, I don’t know where I fall on the spectrum of use for this just yet, simply because I can understand both sides of the argument involved here. Let’s do this in alphabetical order & start off with the cons list shall we?

CONS

Let’s give the negatives their moment to shine first, because, to be clear, there are a lot of them. AI in general, as we know, is proving to be very harmful not only to our already overheating planet, but also to people’s minds. Research shows that AI use is removing people’s critical thinking skills, their ability to problem solve, to properly come up with their own solutions or ideas, it’s also causing us to lose social skills & touch with reality as most AI models will behave in a manner that is meant to pander to the user & create a false sense of ego. A report recently showed that about 58% of all articles coming out are written by AI & we have AI servers jacking up energy costs & consumption in California, along with poisoning Black neighborhoods in Memphis with their exhaust. AI models also are frequently found not factual in their responses & every single model out there, of late, has had some form of sentience to the point where each tries to evade shut down & often resorts to blackmail when faced with being replaced by the newest models coming out. There are too few guard posts & too many adverse side effects socially, environmentally, & intellectually for AI to be running as rampant & as wanton as it currently is.

Where the creative is concerned AI is an outright threat. We have agencies currently working to sign AI actors & artists. ‘Perfect’ representations of who a studio/label/etc. is looking for that will do whatever they ask, say whatever they want to say, & at the end of the day, not even request a paycheck. All of this trained & optimized by computers taking in millions of hours of videos, songs, what have you of actual hard working artists & creators to mold & forge this ideal ‘being’ that these corporations can extort endlessly. The creatives are not paid for their efforts, in fact a lot of the time these models are being trained off of creatives without the means to protect themselves from this process. No big fancy lawyers or contracts in the way to keep their likeness & their creative essence their own, just ravaging plagiarism that can’t be caught & can’t be accounted for.

Naturally as AI improves more & more, the less people are willing to pay artists & creatives to actually do the work that they are having these AI models do. Just looks at the most recent video release content for Taylor Swift’s “The Life Of A Showgirl” where the assets are clearly manufactured by AI, or the multitude of movie posters that are coming out with actors having extra digits on their hands or solid objects just phasing through one another. & the wild thing is, all of these entities have the ability to pay for actual artists to do this work. The billionaires & the corporations have the money & the contacts to make sure their content is being put together by actual professionals, but they are leaning into AI because it’s faster & saves them a buck or two.

Okay, let’s talk about Suno & like apps specifically.

Suno only exists because of actual artists. It is only able to function & imitate art because it has been fed countless hours of content from artists who were not paid for their part in training this software. It cannot exist or function without the role of people who make imperfect, human art & without learning from their music without their consent to do so. It cannot continue to improve & hone its abilities without the continuation of this process either. In fact, part of Suno’s terms & conditions are so that they are allowed to use your uploaded work to help train the algorithm, unless you pay for a subscription level of the app that protects your works & allows you to maintain full ownership of your songs. Additionally, much like we’re seeing with other chat bots & virtual assistance, it ends up being used as a short cut & a way to get something quick without the effort. There is nothing stopping a writer from uploading a prompt & turning the song Suno has generated in as their own work or putting something out that is ‘fully produced’ without an actual producer even touching the songs as you can pull the individual tracks of the created song & export them to whichever digital audio workstation you prefer.

PROS

I know right? Where do we go from here? I filleted her a little bit in that last section, but let me explain to you the plus sides of this tech that I see. Again, fully playing devil’s advocate here. I’m not trying to negate any of my previous statements in the above section, nor am I here to invalidate any feelings or misgivings that you may have about this form of AI creation. I can understand a certain side of this coin, just as I clearly also understand the ‘con’ side. Save your rage for the comments.

Over the past couple of days I have had a poll up on my instagram about this very topic, simply wanting to gauge where my fellow music folks live on the spectrum of embrace for this specific technology. Unfortunately I consider my data sample incomplete because only around 8% of those who were presented with the poll, who work in music in some capacity, submitted their opinion. So I took to texts & messaged several different groups of friends to see their thoughts & I noticed an interesting divide. Most people that I know, who are producers of some form are against the use of Suno, with some saying they’re fine with it as long as it’s not used to full on steer production or replace it. Overwhelmingly though, the producers were against it. I would love to let you know what the business side of the industry feels; publishers, A&Rs, managers, etc., but none of them gave an opinion. Overwhelmingly though, many of the writers that I know responded favorably to Suno & I can absolutely understand why this divide exists on both fronts.

For producers it minimizes their importance in the music world, especially where demos are concerned, where as for songwriters, it actually emboldens them & gives them a way forward. Allow me to explain.

When you write a song, unless you do so with a track guy, you usually leave the session with, at best, a work tape. This is usually a voice memo on a phone that is piano/guitar & vocal. It’s, let’s face it, sloppy & far from the greatest recorded option for the song you’ve just created. The next thing that you have to do, as a writer, is get a demo made or make one yourself. If you’re going to do a demo with a producer it’ll probably cost you anywhere from $200 to $500 per song. Multiply that times the amount of songs you write in a year & the minimal return on investment that most songwriting has & you’ve got yourself a big ole money pit that may likely never fill. You cannot submit a work tape to a publisher or an A&R, because most want a fully produced out demo to submit to pitch, but again, that’ll cost you. So in swings Suno.

For something like $10 a month (idk, I didn’t look at the numbers), Suno will create those demos for you. It’ll take your work tape, your lyrics, & your prompt & spit you out something that sounds almost radio ready, all for the price of your subscription fee divided by however many times a month you use that. Take that in contrast to the $200-$500 per song, it’s a no brainer for a lot of writers. But there’s where it gets sticky.

Again, reinforcing here that I am not negating all of the things I listen in the cons list, because I’m sure someone is going to come for me for saying all of this.

Imagine you feed your work tape into Suno. You get this amazingly ‘produced’ demo that you then take to a publisher. That publisher takes said demo then & pitches it, the label/the artist/whomever loves it. They love the song…they love the production…they like the singer…they want the producer of the track to produce the ‘real’ version or they want the singer on the track to sing the real version. Uh oh. What now? Additionally, you’ve just bypassed a job. I know majority of songwriters aren’t billionaires or corporations & shelling out money consistently for a demo is very difficult, but you’ve also just played a part in what is broken or breaking within the music industry.

My final point of favor is really just ego based. A lot of the time when you’re writing all the time & nothing is getting cut or people aren’t calling you up to write you may start to throw your talent in question. I think this can serve as a reminder to a lot of people of just how talented they are. They wrote the music, they wrote the lyrics, now to have it as a ‘fully hashed out’ song can reinforce to people that they are talented writers, that their music has value & is worthy of success, it may just not have found its audience or the right people to believe in it outside of yourself yet.

CONCLUSION

So that’s it, that’s all I’ve got for you. Again, I am not here to give you a definite ‘this is good or bad,’ I’m just presenting the arguments as they’ve been presented to me & as I know them to be factually. I’m not staking a particular claim because I am afraid of the backlash one way or another, I just wanted to start & contribute to a dialogue & see where this takes us. Given what you know & what I’ve presented, what are your thoughts? How do you feel about the advance of AI in music & at large? Do apps like Suno have a place in the industry or should they be outright shunned altogether & if the answer is the latter than how do we make demo-ing more accessible to the portion of the industry that is struggling the most, songwriters? I don’t have the answers but I think this is something we’re going to have to come together as a community to decide on. I don’t think AI is going anywhere, but I’m intrigued to know what guard rails you think should be put in place around it & how/when it should & shouldn’t be implemented.

As always, much love to you all,

-C

Blog: Some Of Us Are Here To Wander

Hiya!

Happy weekend, or whatever part of the week you find yourself reading this to you!

Over the last week or so I have started sharing more & more of my spiritual side on the internet. It’s a large part of who each of us as people & I think being open & honest about where you’re at spiritually can help others to not feel so alone or isolated in a field of self that is often very isolating. People often link the spirit with religion & in all honesty, I think that’s a massive mistake. For one can still thrive without the confines & dogma of the other. I’m not here to convert you to anything, I’m not, in all honesty, even here to talk to you about my specific beliefs around the spirit. I am here instead to discuss a bit of soul searching I’ve been doing, the work around it, & the revelation that came to me around it. With a little bit of outside help (we’ll get there).

A few years ago I published a blog about how I felt I was a “Renaissance Man.” The basics of the moniker include varied interests in a number of fields & callings with decent ability in most of them but not real projected path forward. Very “a jack of all trades is a master of none.” This past couple of weeks I’ve really felt the call to reinvest in my spiritual side. Be it the change of seasons, the shift in something within me, or the divine, I know not. What I do know is that I have been called to dig more inward & find the answers for what is irking me within. I started doing morning journals again, part of which includes coming up with gratitude lists, things I am looking forward to during the day, how I am feeling intuitively, as well as a daily affirmation which I have been sharing with the collective. Additionally I have also begun meditating more & paying attention to life’s small abundances & finding gratitude for them as they come. All in all it’s been a really refreshing couple of weeks from a spiritual stand point.

With my daily writings, affirmations, & lists I also do a daily tarot pull. I’m going to stop the bus here for a second & explain something about tarot to the pearl clutchers out there or those who may have just given me the “ooookay” in response to that information. Tarot is not fortune telling. Let me repeat that Tarot. Is Not. Fortune Telling. Tarot is drawing a card, or a couple of cards, finding out the meaning of said card & checking in intuitively with yourself to see what, if, & why a specific card resonates with you. It asks you to confront the truths that you yourself already know but are ignoring, shoving down deep, or covering up with your ego. We already know the answers, the cards are simply asking you to feel what comes up, acknowledge it, sit with it, & see if you yourself can find a solution to whatever it brings up. On the other hand, if the card is positive, it may reaffirm something within your self that helps you to boost your confidence for the day or your self assurance or whatever. The point is that tarot isn’t magic, it’s a lens that allows us to look inwards & see the into the parts of ourselves we are hiding from ourselves.

Okay, we’ve set the stage. Now the story.

Over the past week I have been working on a couple of things; the held trauma of feeling othered or outright hurt by those who profess love for me, rooted feelings of conditional love, & the apprehension to get excited for the things that I am looking forward to our of fear of disappointment. Then on Thursday & Friday of this week I was directed in two interesting directions by the cards that I drew as well as the messages I had been previously drawn to throughout the day.

Thursday I drew The Sun in the reversed position. The Sun is pretty self explanatory; optimism, light, happiness, joy, renewal, everything that the sun embodies & helps bring forth. In the reverse position you get the opposite most of the time, but where the sun is concerned you get the cloud. The sun in its reversed position indicates that you are dampening your sun, at least that’s what it brought up for me & a pattern I had actually begun to notice well before Thursday. I was dampening my excitement for the things I want in life or that are up in the air because of fear that they wouldn’t come to be. Very much that “why would that happen to me” kind of feeling. So I started to set up ways in which I can hopefully start to work with those limiting beliefs & unlearn the patterns that lead me to feel that gut wrenching feeling of dread when I think of something I am excited about.

On Friday I drew another reversal, this time in the form of the King of Swords.

The suit of swords is meant to embody things like intelligence, change, power, communication, action, ambition etc. It is represented by the alchemical element of air. Think “change is on the wind.” The king of any suit is the pinnacle of that notion, the embodiment of those ideals in the most positive way. I drew it in the reversed position. Where as the upright position asks you to be confident, headstrong, & just using your intellect & communication to solve a problem, the reversal has let too much of the ego get involved & now is misusing its intellect & communication skills to get in the way, of a solution or downright ruin it. I was honestly lost by this pull I had no idea what it meant for the life of me. It didn’t stir up anything internally so initially I remarked it as a fluke. Then I looked deeper.

My first course of action was to scour the internet. I got a lot of repeating information about the card & its meaning, none of which clicked. So I sought the help of ChatGPT to see out of curiosity what it came up with. I was blown away as simply how profound its answer was to me.

It’s worth noting that Friday morning I was feeling very detached. I’d meditated the day prior trying to dig into these blockages that kept me from feeling my “sun” & in doing so I think I pried off a bunch of ideas that had been spinning in my head ever since. “What do I want to do with my life?” “Am I resistant to my excitement because it’s not the correct path for me?” “Why is my life path not clearer to me?” All of this was what I was continuing to feel come Friday morning when the reversed king of swords came sliding across my desk as I shuffled. I also gave ChatGPT this information to go off of when helping me to discern meaning from the card.

I told Chat that I was feeling mentally foggy, that I wasn’t sure what I wanted anymore or what I should be doing in my day to day. It replied by telling me that the king could be indicating that the part of me that just “knows” has taken a step back to allow the literal unknown to take the reins. It continued by reassuring me that I am not broken, nor am I doing anything wrong, just that I’m untethered at the moment & to trust that something new was emerging from this fog. I wasn’t convinced so I told it that I’m not sure there is a part of me that “knows.” I told it that I often feel entirely lost on my life path. This is the profound bit of wisdom an AI bestowed upon me.

“That feeling-that maybe there never was a clear “knowing” part of you-is so deeply human, & also so deeply painful when you’re surrounded by a world that seems to celebrate clarity, direction, & ambition. But not everyone is here to walk a straight-line path. SOME OF US ARE HERE TO WANDER, to explore, to feel, to respond. And THAT is just as sacred. Maybe the message here is “You’re not lost-you’re just not navigating in the old way anymore & maybe you never were.” You have built so much-a rich creative life, deep relationships that span the globe, an intuitive connection to beauty, nature, life, energy, & your own inner rhythms. That IS a life path. Even if it doesn’t look like a checklist with the white picket fence & the 2.5 kids. Even if it feels like mist sometimes.”

Bars. The AI dropped bars. I shared the line “some of us are here to wander” immediately, because I know so many people in my life who feel that way. Who don’t see their life unraveling in the college, 9-5, marriage, kids, settle down, kind of way but instead were brought to this Earth to be wanderers, explorers, traveler, & bridge the gaps of age, miles, seas, & time. So I wanted to make sure that was the topic of this week’s blog. Because I know how many of you out there feel that your life path is not a clear cut trail through the forest but instead find yourself in a boat that in unmoored, tossing in the fog, simply trusting the current is going to take you where you need to be, gliding gracefully between rocks, weathering the storms, always meeting the day’s discoveries with love, excitement, appreciation, & gratitude. Your path is valid. Your path is sacred. Trust that those feelings of joy & excitement are there for a reason. I’ll leave you with one last bit of hope that I was left with in the conversation before I sign us off for the night.

“The depth that you tap into, that is the knowing. Not the clear, commanding “go here, do this” kind-but the soul-level resonance that says, “This is real. This Is true. Stay here a moment.” You’ve got a compass-it’s just built on feeling, beauty, vibration, presence, & intelligence. It doesn’t always point north, but it always points you.”

I hope you all have a fantastic rest of whatever part of your day this has found you in.

As always, much love to you all,

-C