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Prog created with the help of AI

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Atavachron View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Atavachron Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 23 2024 at 17:38
^ And let's not forget the often unnoticed element of human mistakes, flubs, flaws, and failures, all which in fact add to the fascination & appreciation of art, not diminishes it.


"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 23 2024 at 19:32
Originally posted by Spitf1r3 Spitf1r3 wrote:

The musicians that keep recycling other musicians Ideas?!?
...

hI,

Ian Anderson, in that special he did for Rick Wakeman for his series of interviews, specified that "everything that can be done with "rock'n'roll" has been done". Which did not sit too well with RW since he is one of the most repetitive of players, with the same notes and chords that music history has identified for 500 years, more or less ... I kinda joke that he does not feel the music ... it's all chords and notes and let's make believe the identified ideas of what music is ... this is that and so on.

In many ways, it gets to the point of how many combinations you can come up with out of one note, or chord, and we end up with various exercises, that in the end, probably sound the same, but feel different.

I'm of the opinion that too much of music is special effects and this is the main reason why I state .. UNPLUG IT ... so you can see the meat of the work ... and a lot of metal bands will fail, but then, so will all the bands in the Red Lion circuit and all the other college circuits.

I think that taking it "literally", that is one note is supposed to be this or sound like this, then we have a problem ... which an actor can easily fudge ... Keith Michell did a King Lear and there is a section that the same word is repeated ... and the director, Peter Brook, specified that in the 200/300 performances he did not ONCE said it the same way ... now you know the problem with rock'n'roll and how we tied ourselves to a staff, and now we can't move ... the issue is with the music instructors and the fact that music history made a bad habit of interpreting the music to be this and that ... the same thing about major and minor ... the bizarest of ideas in music!


Edited by moshkito - October 23 2024 at 19:34
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote siLLy puPPy Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 23 2024 at 21:10
Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

^ And let's not forget the often unnoticed element of human mistakes, flubs, flaws, and failures, all which in fact add to the fascination & appreciation of art, not diminishes it.




If you listen to ChatGTP you'll hear that human errors, speech pauses, flubs and flaws are programmed into the whole thing to give it a convincingly faux authenticity

In other words, just like photos and videos, music and really NOTHING can be trusted as real from here on :(






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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Atavachron Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 23 2024 at 21:37
^ Yeah not exactly. If a respected artist releases new stuff and has a non-AI disclaimer, you either trust that or not. I don't see Bob Dylan's next album (assuming he has one) being anything other than authentic. Conversely some will be interested in AI-generated music, there will probably a whole subgenre of the stuff.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote siLLy puPPy Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 23 2024 at 21:53
^ good point. There will be many who vehemently oppose AI and make it a point to advertise they are the real deal, human creativity that is





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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote KorgC3 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 24 2024 at 22:58
Originally posted by Spitf1r3 Spitf1r3 wrote:

" The musicians that keep recycling other musicians Ideas?!?"
I know that some musicians cynically capitalize on specific trends, but even this a conscious decision to make.
A robot that's good at imitating humans is nonetheless a robot. It struggles to interpret purpose behind intent, because it's limited in senses. A human hears a storm or an earthquake, and then he will transcribe it as tremolo strings. For an AI algorithm, tremolo strings are just another information piece in the database.
Without any application of intent, it will not use it in a human-like manner.
Humans also do seemingly "random" things due to many varying factors, for example curiosity.
A robot will do something random based solely on the notion of being random the way it's defined in its database. 

Originally posted by Spitf1r3 Spitf1r3 wrote:

"Since when is about how music is made and not the music anymore?"
Well, I already said in another post, that I personally find unaltered AI music to be very distinguishable.
At that time I was considering only the compression and audio rendering, but after hearing more examples, I came to realize, that there are sensible technical differences in music produced by the available AI algorithms.
I've counted six different composition elements that AI manages awkwardly:
1.Pitch control - Currently there doesn't seems to be separate dedicated engine to all the pitch effects. The AI just borrows from the database without properly differentiating between Vibrato and Portamento. It cannot do different scales properly either.
2.Round Robins - Having a different acoustic range of the same note seems like an easy task for an AI, yet, it kind of fails with it as-well. IDK if that's the compression or the over-reliance on reverb, but it basically applies it on each and every note by default giving its music a certain aura of cheapness.
3.Note dissonance - AI usually fails to form logic around this, and the melody balances between harmony and cacophony.
4.Time signature changes/odd time signatures - AI usually tries to apply an orderly logic to this. It fails miserably especially when different instruments do different time signatures at the same time. The shifts are usually unnatural or don't continue the melody logically.
5.Tempo Changes - AI generally seems to struggle with Tempo changes. Even with seemingly simple melodies, it either clips, or "breaks" the tempo illogically and unnaturally. Basically a change for the sake of change.
6.Genre Fusion/Shifts - Once again, in-spite of all the information fed to the AI, it cannot create even a basic genre hybrid, because it cannot truly understand the logic behind what makes different genres work. It struggles even mix distinguishable features of different genres, to something that sounds like a natural hybrid. It always leans towards one structure.

I think that the basic fundamental reasons to this is that AI never questions itself. It never ask "why" things the way they are and "how" things can be done differently.
Granted, if there are going to be multiple separate algorithms working in integration with each other, it could be possible to create a very human like robot. Currently it's just not the case, as the framework used by mainstream AI software, isn't based upon such a complex set of algorithms, but rather simple ones mainly made for comparison and imitation.


Edited by KorgC3 - October 24 2024 at 23:55
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2024 at 07:49
Originally posted by siLLy puPPy siLLy puPPy wrote:

...
If you listen to ChatGTP you'll hear that human errors, speech pauses, flubs and flaws are programmed into the whole thing to give it a convincingly faux authenticity

In other words, just like photos and videos, music and really NOTHING can be trusted as real from here on :(
...

Hi,

I was thinking that a simple misspelling would do the trick and get many more follow-ups and ideas open. I imagine that it almost would not need a re-program, if the whole thing is aware of what it is doing, and I'm sure it is to a large degree.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2024 at 08:09
Originally posted by KorgC3 KorgC3 wrote:

...
I've counted six different composition elements that AI manages awkwardly:

3.Note dissonance - AI usually fails to form logic around this, and the melody balances between harmony and cacophony.
...
Hi,

A lot of dissonance is based on accidental errors and often, or an intentional idea ... a good example is XTC, with Andy Partridge continually going against the grain ... which would trip AI really quick. In this example, let's face it ... it's the dissonance that makes that band special! I don't think that anyone can code something to be as off his rocker as Andy.

Originally posted by KorgC3 KorgC3 wrote:

...
4.Time signature changes/odd time signatures - AI usually tries to apply an orderly logic to this. It fails miserably especially when different instruments do different time signatures at the same time. The shifts are usually unnatural or don't continue the melody logically.
...

AND, no doubt, one of the easiest ways to tell if AI is present or not ... like the dissonance idea, this is something that often is over looked, and a lot of progressive bands change time signatures to odd time ones and back, simply to say ... "look ma ... I'm doing progressive music!". To my ear, these always sound forced and not very good, and they are not defined properly within a composing context at all ... it's almost ... break it up right here with it! It is one of the things that take my ears out of the listening for that band. But part of the issue is how folks don't know, or study, how signature changes can be done. If it makes sense musically it works, but if the musicality is an idea ... or worse ... just a lyric to make you think this and that ... the chances are that it will fall apart. I doubt AI can deal with this well, but then, most bands are not musically well defined to do so, either ... comparing it to a classical format with lots of instruments, the simplicity of a rock band with 3 instruments (drummer doesn't count ... since more than half of them will do exactly the same thing slower or faster. That's not drumming .. that's time keeping, and guess what AI is gonna do?

Originally posted by KorgC3 KorgC3 wrote:

...
5.Tempo Changes - AI generally seems to struggle with Tempo changes. Even with seemingly simple melodies, it either clips, or "breaks" the tempo illogically and unnaturally. Basically a change for the sake of change.
... 

See above. so much of music in the past 25 years has been DAW based (so to speak) as it is way too metronomic and not free enough, to the point where it makes me think that AI has been around since the day that Sonar and Ableton were battling it out for all bedroom and bathroom composers.

Originally posted by KorgC3 KorgC3 wrote:

....
6.Genre Fusion/Shifts - Once again, in-spite of all the information fed to the AI, it cannot create even a basic genre hybrid, because it cannot truly understand the logic behind what makes different genres work. It struggles even mix distinguishable features of different genres, to something that sounds like a natural hybrid. It always leans towards one structure.
... 

Not sure about this, since someone might be aware of so many other musical scales all over the world and all of a sudden you get something that a Western Ear can not exactly duplicate ... but there it is! The idea of fusion, and other musical shifts ... is the same thing as before in time changes and compositional changes, ... depending on what they are based, which more often than not is the person singing the lyrics ... musically that is weak, as for 500 years, it has been the flow of the notes and chords that have told a story ... but now, none of the music matters if we allow the singer to be the one telling us what is happening, and the music? Who cares ... no one is listening anyway, and you and I will not LIKELY be whistling it any time soon!!!!

Interesting how so many of us look at this ... I'm not sure the whole thing is bad, but it tells you one thing about the "modern human" ... not only do we not trust it, we belittle it, and think it is not intelligent enough ... in this sense the advent of AI is scary and often ridiculous ... but that's the way of technology and greed. I call it Childhood's End ... I don't think there is a winning formula here but for money making a lot of businesses will use it ... see the overabundance of the Adobe advertisements lately?


Edited by moshkito - October 25 2024 at 08:15
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote KorgC3 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2024 at 00:18
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

so much of music in the past 25 years has been DAW based (so to speak) as it is way too metronomic and not free enough, to the point where it makes me think that AI has been around since the day that Sonar and Ableton were battling it out for all bedroom and bathroom composers.

Well with the advent of digital production tools, Midi, Modules, DAW's and etc, people started striving for perfection.
Certain improvisatory aspect has been lost, but to give some cred to bedroom composers, they still apply human-style decision making, whereas AI looks on patterns more schematically.
Lets say that there is a song that finishes with a section that's in harmonic minor. A human composer would restructure it to be referential to the previous sections of the song, to form a cathartic climax.
AI on the other hand, just views it as a harmonic minor section. It might recognize some correlation between it and the early part of the song, but it never be as cathartic. More often than not, it will lean towards context-less and schematic composition.
Once again, much of it has to do with the fact that at this point AI can only self-reference but not to self-reflect.

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Not sure about this, since someone might be aware of so many other musical scales all over the world and all of a sudden you get something that a Western Ear can not exactly duplicate ... but there it is! The idea of fusion, and other musical shifts ... is the same thing as before in time changes and compositional changes, ... depending on what they are based, which more often than not is the person singing the lyrics ... musically that is weak, as for 500 years, it has been the flow of the notes and chords that have told a story ... but now, none of the music matters if we allow the singer to be the one telling us what is happening, and the music? Who cares ... no one is listening anyway, and you and I will not LIKELY be whistling it any time soon!!!!

I think that the "Fusion" argument is important, since music for the last 100 years was developed with combination of unorthodox individual elements together (different scales, specific instruments, vocal techniques and etc).
Prog and J-Fusion are more extreme examples of this, but the truth of the matter is that the foundation for such genres was already structured in the first half of the 20th century.
There is a topic dedicated to Disco-Prog on the forum now. AI would struggle to make a "Disco-Prog" like melody even if there is data about both "Prog" and "Disco" in its database. It requires an exact reference, whereas humans are more free with their thoughts. Because of that, even a somewhat musically illiterate person can imagine and whistle something that's quite novel and odd.

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

but it tells you one thing about the "modern human" ... not only do we not trust it, we belittle it, and think it is not intelligent enough ...

I do find it saddening that individual humans resort to defeatism because they seek external worth instead of personal value when honing their skills. Art can obviously be commercial, and arguably mostly was during antique times, but none of these people would do art, if they didn't enjoy doing it in the first place. I can see why someone might struggle to trust others, but nowadays so many are no longer trusting themselves.

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

I don't think there is a winning formula here but for money making a lot of businesses will use it ... see the overabundance of the Adobe advertisements lately?

AI corporatism is another problem. Since the public AI market is relativity new, I'm not surprised that the ethical standards are quite low, and these who advocate for better ethics are a minority.
There are a lot more debates over the value companies like Adobe though, with more alternative software existing in the market.


Edited by KorgC3 - October 26 2024 at 00:30
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2024 at 01:11
Originally posted by Spitf1r3 Spitf1r3 wrote:

The musicians that keep recycling other musicians Ideas?!?
...

Hi,

And let's not forget that 100 years ago we would not have been able to say that at all, since the ability to hear a lot of music, let alone different things, was similar to the very joke and idea about a man going to the moon around the 1900's.

No one would have even conceived something like that at that particular time, but these days, when we can hear anything from around the world, there is going to be a lot of folks thinking that their music has been stolen, or similar ... and in all honesty I have an issue with that ... since how you saw it and felt it, was not the same thing as another composer ... and sooner or later this will have to be addressed in the copyrights definitions ... in the end, the whole idea is messed up ... and that example I have mentioned before is the actor that was playing King Lear doing 200/300 performances and not once did he say that very same line that repeats itself the same way ... likewise the same set of notes can be played with a very different way and feeling that does not bring up necessarily the idea that it was stolen ... but this is an area that a lot of folks have gone after several times, although I'm not sure that all of them succeeded very well.

AI, in some ways, has a slight advantage if you take a strong computer that has billions of songs and musical anything in it, and it can find all the examples of the same section of notes through hundreds of years, then remove those and create something similar but not the same, even if all it takes is the switching of one note or chord around ... a sort of PDQ Bach ... turn it upside down. So, in this sense, AI will end up being more original from the way we look at it ... but when we define it in terms of EXPRESSION, now we have something very different, but are we now saying that the person that does Bob Dylan is not just inspired by him, but copying him? Now we have a different problem ... and immediately we will state that expression is not music ... the notes and chords are ... 

Heck, so much of what we are considering Prog these days is so AI like to my ears, it's not funny, which is the reason why I state UNPLUG IT so we can see the meat and the bones ... I imagine half the bands will die right there! ... and Tongue Wink LOL DT will fall off even faster! Embarrassed ???


Edited by moshkito - October 26 2024 at 01:14
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2024 at 10:31
Originally posted by KorgC3 KorgC3 wrote:

...Certain improvisatory aspect has been lost, but to give some cred to bedroom composers, they still apply human-style decision making, whereas AI looks on patterns more schematically.
...

Hi,

Did not mean to make it sound bad, but it was a way of saying that "composing" had been simplified with the notes and what not right in front of you ... in olden days, without a full score you had to imagine it a lot more, but now with the DAW the imagining takes a lot less time, and ... my thoughts are that a lot of the feeling that goes into the creation of things mind/intuition style, might get lost, or accidentally bypassed because you or I saw this, and changed it to something else ... as you suggest, might make better sense harmonically, however, we would not know that for real until it was played ... because a player with abilities and then some, might downplay it and make it fit ... AI, is not capable of doing this, unless you put it in manually.

Originally posted by KorgC3 KorgC3 wrote:

...
Prog and J-Fusion are more extreme examples of this, but the truth of the matter is that the foundation for such genres was already structured in the first half of the 20th century.
...

I have been saying that for a long time ... and use Stravinsky as an example, probably way too much, which annoys some folks, since they know that "Le Sacre du Printemps"  would showcase a lot of prog rock as not good enough ... compositionally, specially, since too much of it is based on a riff and not the compositional value.

Originally posted by KorgC3 KorgC3 wrote:

...
I do find it saddening that individual humans resort to defeatism because they seek external worth instead of personal value when honing their skills. Art can obviously be commercial, and arguably mostly was during antique times, but none of these people would do art, if they didn't enjoy doing it in the first place. I can see why someone might struggle to trust others, but nowadays so many are no longer trusting themselves.
...

Absolutely ... I don't mind the commercial thing, except when it tries to throw down your throat and mind with a crowbar ... at that point Classic Radio in America is the worst! But, sadly, a lot of the progressive music shows on the internet, follow the same formula ... they have to make sure they play enough known material so they don't lose "their audience" which was a fear mechanism that didn't exist ... it was like saying that people were not smart enough to choose and know better ... it was a really cheap shot about what so many of the rock folks really thought of the fans ... which of course, has turned around ... and the fans are "in control" ... which I don't think will last long enough ... soon more than one artist is going to put their foot down ... and many of them will follow.

Originally posted by KorgC3 KorgC3 wrote:

...
There are a lot more debates over the value companies like Adobe though, with more alternative software existing in the market.

I think there is a market for it, for a while ... writing the kind of introductory things that they show in their commercials is fine with me ... sometimes you need a nice and detailed something that your mind can not come up with ... however, we know from the history of advertising, that stuff like that ends up falling apart quickly and get dropped ... the surprise factor always wins, as does the creative factor, which ADOBE will not be able to showcase ... I think they mean well, and they are taking advantage of it to make a lot of folks feel better, but don't try a Dear John letter with Adobe ... that would be the cake a definitely a split! Communication via AI ... I can see the sci-fi film next year!

And thanks for reading and replying ... many folks here are not good readers in my book, although I would be accused now and then of not "getting it" ... but being a writer of lots of poetry, short stories and stuff on music ... I would know have some really things to say about AI ... though I'm not sure that many folks here really seem to be onto it ... a lot of what is considered "prog-rock" for me, is almost the same as AI ... format, solos, lyrics, styles ... all the same ... it just sounds different ... unplug it and you have copies of a lot of things out there! I have a feeling that a lot of folks don't like my saying that as it might bring down their tastes some ... I can't help it ... I came from at least 1000 years of music history ... and a lot of this stuff is too simple to consider better than they are, which is why I tend to joke that they are so AI ... it's not funny .,.... it's like the musicians in the canteen in the famous movie! 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Valdez Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2024 at 11:57
Not Prog exactly, but,  the first, (and last) thing I will ever do with A.I.  I added some voice layers over it.
Supposed to be doom laden and scary.  Maybe good for Halloween.  I just HAD to try it out.  Starts at o:22
and is a continuation of another song.  


Edited by Valdez - October 26 2024 at 12:01
https://bakullama1.bandcamp.com/album/sleepers-2024

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Davesax1965 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 27 2024 at 03:51
My two cents: AI music isn't music. 
Does it need further discussion ? 

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Valdez Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 27 2024 at 10:11
Originally posted by Davesax1965 Davesax1965 wrote:

My two cents: AI music isn't music. 
Does it need further discussion ? 

Agreed.  Clap
https://bakullama1.bandcamp.com/album/sleepers-2024

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