Imagine a robot that can sing just like your favorite music stars! That's what AI (artificial intelligence) can do nowadays. It listens to how singers sound and then tries to copy them. Here’s the short and sweet on this:
How It Works:
AI learns from singers' voices and then creates new songs that sound like them.
The Big Issue:
Copying someone's voice without asking is tricky because it's like using someone else’s work. Artists and their voices are special, and we need to respect that.
Finding Fairness:
It's all about making rules so that everyone plays nice. Artists should get credit for their unique voices, and AI should be used in a way that’s fair to everyone.
The Future:
The hope is to have AI help musicians make cool new music in a way that's fair and fun.
Using AI to mimic artists' voices is amazing but comes with big questions on fairness and creativity. It's like having a superpower—how we use it matters a lot!
I reviewed the Lalals.com service here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYw4G...
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I reviewed the Lalals.com service here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYw4G...
You can use the BEATSPOT10 code to get 10% off your subscription here: lalals.com/ref/336/?campaign=Beatspot
If some of your plugins are not showing up in Ableton Live 12 on Apple Silicon (in my case Native Instruments and iZotope), then go to your Live 12 app icon, right-click or CMD + I, and tick the "Open using Rosetta" checkbox.
Find more on the topic here:
https://youtu.be/0iiH9qCW9Gk?si=kk3y3...
After a few months in which I didn't produce anything to focus more on mixes, masters, content for the channel, products, and other projects. Here's a sort of "thing" I'd like to do in the next few weeks/month/who knows.
I'll document whenever I'm flipping loops, as it's such an interesting aspect of beatmaking that I never jumped on enough.
This isn't meant to be purely educational, I'm thinking of it as inspirational content with multiple ways you can mangle loops to come up with new ideas.
If you don't know Drake's producer Noah "40" Shebib, he's been responsible for the sound of Drake in the past years. He pioneered a technique to make room for the vocal: sample rate reduction.
Don't worry: it's not so obscure, we made a video with a couple of methods to achieve this type of effect, that can be applied to countless genres and not only vocal-based trap or hip hop.
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