Will AI mean the death of music, or herald a new era of creativity?
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[February 01, 2024]
By Alessandro Parodi, Olivier Sorgho and Matt Stock
GDANSK/LONDON (Reuters) - Inside a recording room at Queen Mary
University of London, a group of researchers fiddle with novel
artificial intelligence (AI) tools to develop what they call the "new
virtual worlds" of music.
Andrea Martonelli and Max Graf are among more than 30 doctoral students
working with Dr Mathieu Barthet, a senior lecturer in Digital Media, to
explore computational creativity and generative AI. Together, they have
set up a futuristic studio where music meets cutting-edge tech.
"It's like extended reality, XR, is a way of extending the physical
reality that we live in," Graf told Reuters while showcasing "Netz", his
virtual instrument.
Netz is played through an augmented-reality headset that tracks gestures
to create corresponding outputs, like notes or chords.
Martonelli plays the "HITar", an advanced guitar with AI sensors, which
reads his movements to make drum and synthesiser sounds. While the
presence of AI in music-making can be traced back to the 1950s, recent
groundbreaking advances in generative AI, with robots now making music
as digital pop stars, have divided opinions in the industry.
Made popular last year by the ChatGPT language system, generative AI is
capable of creating content including original sounds, lyrics or entire
songs on its own, but artists often use simpler AI to enhance their
sound. UK alternative rock singer-songwriter YUNGBLUD told Reuters he
believes AI could help his music go "to another direction". Other
musicians worry that the technology could go too far. "I feel if you
need AI to help me write a song, especially when it's for a likeness,
that's not cool," Amy Love from alternative rock duo Nova Twins said,
referring to artist's voices being artificially generated and adding
that using dead artists' voices is "not on".
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Andrea Martelloni, a PhD Student at the Queen Mary University of
London, demonstrates the 'HITar', an AI-powered augmented guitar, at
the 2024 National Association of Music Merchants (NAMM) trade show
in Anaheim, California, U.S., January 25, 2024. REUTERS/Jorge
Garcia/File Photo
In November, the Beatles released
"Now and Then", billed as their last song and featuring the voice of
John Lennon extrapolated with AI from an old recording. Warner Music
said in November it was partnering with the estate of deceased
French singer Edith Piaf to re-create her voice using AI.
While labels and streaming companies partner to
market the technology, many experts say AI raises legal and ethical
concerns. "Unlawful development is what would put the sort of the
opportunities of generative AI at risk," said Abbas Lightwalla,
director of global legal policy at the International Federation of
the Phonographic Industry (IFPI). But regulation of generative AI is
only in its early stages. "I think AI can have its place in the
music production chain, again if it's guided in the right way and if
we ensure that the musicians keep a certain amount of control, and
performers as well," said Dr. Barthet. "But there might be
situations where (AI) generated music works for new things that have
not even emerged yet, new virtual worlds."
(Reporting by Alessandro Parodi, Olivier Sorgho and Matthew Stock;
additional reporting by Sarah Mills; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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