Pretty useful.
Pretty great.
Amid all the worry about artificial intelligence killing jobs, replacing the human touch, and taking over the world, today's post is a first-person report on how AI helps create music. This guest post by Rick Millward does not describe AI as a Frankenstein monster, destroying creativity. Quite the opposite. The post describes the experience of finding AI to be a useful tool for music creators.
Rick Millward is a songwriter, musician, music producer, and performer. He worked in Silicon Valley, then Nashville, and now has retired in Southern Oregon, where he performs primarily in wine venues. His most recent album is Loveland. It and his other music are available on Spotify and other streaming services.
Guest Post by Rick Millward
I thought it would be interesting to share a personal experience with an AI application specifically targeted to music production.When a song is recorded, the final product is a stereo, or two-channel “mix.” All the various instruments are encoded together. Once this is done, it can’t be modified, or as we say in the biz, it’s a “master.” The source recordings are either separate digital files, or prior to computers, on magnetic tape, where each instrument has its own separate track. These tapes were big brothers to cassette tapes, with a difference being the tape was two inches wide. The first recordings I ever made were done on this medium.These tapes were lost, but I did have a mix of the songs that I transferred to computer to preserve them as soon as I could. As the years passed, I redid some, rewrote others, but there was one song that I always felt had great performances from the musicians, but would have liked to sing it again and keep the original work. Some years back, there was a software program for karaoke that supposedly could remove a vocal from a finished recording but it didn’t really work that well, certainly not for professional use.Then last year it was announced that a cassette tape of John Lennon playing the piano was used to create a new Beatles recording. Using AI, they were able to separate the vocal from the piano, and then use it as the basis for a new track. Here’s the story of that project:
The AI used for this is called “stem separation” with each instrument called a “stem,” I guess like stems on a plant. Weird name aside, the interesting thing is that it uses newly developed algorithms to “hear” the different sounds and recognize them as drums, guitar or whatever and so is able to create a separate file for each.
Then early this year I upgraded my decade-,old recording software and discovered that it included a stem separator module. I loaded up my old song and was delighted to hear that it separated all the instruments perfectly, and now I could redo the vocal as well as make any other changes to the song; add another guitar or whatever. As a side note, this has become somewhat nostalgic for me, sort of like time travel to revisit old friends and play music with them, as well as my former self. Kind of trippy.
There are concerns that AI will profoundly disrupt the economy, and just like any new paradigm or invention, this is to be expected. There are innumerable applications for AI, and they are coming regardless, and there will be unintended consequences that require both regulation and adaptation. My experience using this tool for my art is one very useful and rewarding example of how it will enhance our lives, and one hopes the value of AI will be greater than any turmoil it creates in this ever-changing world.
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7 comments:
We don’t know enough to regulate AI, so we will be the pet and AI the master and I think it’s coming so fast it will take place in my limited lifetime. I get a lot of experts talking about AI on my tik tok feeds and it’s coming soon. Singularity in 5 years maybe. The problem is it’s a world wide thing so no one country wants to stop or try to regulate it. It will do wonderful things, but not as confident of the end result as I expect AI will be the master. Dogs are lovable as pets but are humans?
As with anything new, there’s the bad with the good. Computers are great, but you have to be aware of hackers. The Atomic bomb helped win a war, but nobody wants to use it again. But, the science of atomic energy now is used to light up your home. So, that was good.
I’m sure AI will be wonderful when used correctly. But beware of the nefarious actors out there. It’s way too soon to know what they can do and how to write laws to combat them. So, all you can do is wait and see.
I have used stem separation a number of times in creating my music. I recently used it to extract a drums and base track from a YouTube video, and I’m now using it for the basis of my first rap song.
I also recently used it for a neighbor who wanted a karaoke version of a Beatles song, by separating out the vocal stem and then deleting it.
But meanwhile, Spotify is creating mediocre AI versions of various music genres and inserting them into playlists because then they don’t have to pay royalties to actual human musicians. Spotify sucks.
Is this REALLY Mr. Millward, in word and image? How are we to know?
Yes, really Rick Millward. The Word document he sent me had a grammatical error, four instances of misplaced quotation marks, and one use of the numeral 2 when the style protocol would have spelled out the two. Had AI written it those errors would not have been there. Like diamonds in comparison with lab-created zirconium, you know it is genuine by the flaws.
Could the AI request have been for a version which would fool human auditors specifically via telltale, seeded “human” mistakes?
This was me — screwed again by Blogger’s dopey user interface and my own inattention.
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