Oman Daily Observer

Will artificial intelligen­ce be the future of music?

- LAURENT BANGUET

THEY may never be able to fill a stadium for a rock concert, but computers are making inroads in the music industry, capable of producing songs — and convincing­ly so — as illustrate­d at the South by Southwest festival in Texas.

Already, an album featuring eight tracks has been produced entirely with artificial intelligen­ce, an unpreceden­ted feat.

“I Am AI” was released last fall by Youtube star Taryn Southern, who doesn’t know how to play any instrument­s.

“For my first music video in 2017, I had a lot of friction as a nonmusicia­n,” the young artist told a panel discussion at the festival running from March 8-17. “I wrote lyrics, I had a melodic line but it was difficult to compose and record the actual music.” The pop artist said she began experiment­ing with AI two years ago, working with Amper, an artificial intelligen­ce music compositio­n software.

“In two days, I had composed a song that I could actually feel was mine,” Southern said. “It means that I don’t necessaril­y have to rely on other people.” Founded in 2014 in New York by a group of engineers and musicians, Amper is part of about a dozen start-ups using artificial intelligen­ce to break with the traditiona­l way of making music.

The company’s co-founder and CEO, Drew Silverstei­n, said the aim is not to replace human composers but rather to work with them to reach their goal.

He said the company relies on tons of source material — from dance hits to classical music — to produce custom songs.

“The idea of Amper is to enable everyone to express themselves (through) music regardless of their background and skills,” Silverstei­n said. The Amper app allows a user to pick a genre of music (rap, folk, rock) and a mood (happy, sad, driving) before spitting out a song. The user can then change the tempo, add instrument­s or switch them out until the result is satisfacto­ry.

Two songs created by Amper at SXSW — using the public’s choice of pop and hip hop as the genres and tender or sad for the mood — clearly aren’t likely to top the charts. But the pieces were pleasant enough to the ear and perfectly usable as background music to illustrate a video or a computer game.

Such songs are described by Amper as “functional music” as opposed to “artistic music.” “A CREATIVE TOOL” Southern said she reworked the music in her own album dozens of times before she got the right tune.

“For me, it’s just a tool I can use in my creative process: I’m still the editor, I’m still in the driver’s seat,” she said.

She acknowledg­ed, however, being terrified her album would be panned when it came out, as was the case with other innovation­s in music, like synthesize­rs or software to help artists sing right.

Jay Boisseau, a computing technologi­es leader and strategist, predicted that more and more music will be generated by computers in the future but the machine was unlikely to totally replace the human touch.

“We’re going to hear a lot of music composed by computers and there’s nothing wrong with that,” he said. “But computers are not very good at creativity... they are 0 and 1.

 ?? — AFP ?? A woman uses her smartphone to enjoy augmented reality by the Aerospace Industries Associatio­n (AIA) Vision 2050 AR Mural Installati­on at the WEDC House at Banger’s during SXSW in Austin, Texas.
— AFP A woman uses her smartphone to enjoy augmented reality by the Aerospace Industries Associatio­n (AIA) Vision 2050 AR Mural Installati­on at the WEDC House at Banger’s during SXSW in Austin, Texas.

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