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Eventbrite Study Reveals Shift in Ticket-Buying Trends Among Music Fans

June 19, 2024

A recent study by Eventbrite has uncovered a notable shift in the behaviour of music fans, who are now purchasing concert tickets later than ever before. This trend was a key topic of discussion at...

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Why are female artists underplayed on Canadian radio?

June 19, 2024

A new University of Ottawa study has revealed a stark disparity in the airplay of music by women, particularly racialized and trans artists, on commercial Canadian radio over the past decade...

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Thousands of Swifties made 'unbelievable impact' on Edinburgh

June 19, 2024

Taylor Swift’s billion-dollar Eras Tour recently graced Edinburgh, bringing a flood of enthusiastic Swifties to the city and creating an exceptional boom for local businesses. Tens of thousands of...

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Amazon Music Livestream: Showcasing Kendrick Lamar in "The Pop Out — Ken & Friends"

June 19, 2024

Amazon Music is set to enhance its live streaming offerings with an exciting event: "The Pop Out — Ken & Friends," featuring the acclaimed rapper Kendrick Lamar. Scheduled for Juneteenth in...

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The Black Keys' Management Shift: A New Chapter and Its Impact on the Live Music Sector

June 18, 2024

The Black Keys, the renowned rock duo, have recently made headlines with their decision to part ways with their long-time managers, Irving Azoff and Steve Moir. This significant change comes in the...

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Jhené Aiko: The Soulful Songstress of Contemporary R&B

June 18, 2024

Jhené Aiko Efuru Chilombo, known professionally as Jhené Aiko, has become a defining voice in contemporary R&B with her ethereal vocals, deeply personal lyrics, and genre-blending sound. Born on...

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Billie Eilish says she cried after performing ‘The Greatest’ for the first time

June 18, 2024

Billie Eilish has opened up about the emotional experience of performing her new song “The Greatest” for the first time. Her latest album, Hit Me Hard And Soft, was released on May 17, and Eilish...

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Billie Eilish responds to Lana Del Rey calling her the “voice of our generation”

June 18, 2024

Billie Eilish has responded to Lana Del Rey’s recent declaration that she is the “voice of our generation.” Eilish made a special surprise appearance during Del Rey’s headlining set at Coachella’s...

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Lana Del Rey has spoken out on her “fight” with “stalkers” in Paris: “Don’t follow me

June 18, 2024

Lana Del Rey has spoken out following her “fight” with “stalkers” in Paris. The singer was recently spotted having a heated exchange in the French capital, where she claimed someone was “following”...

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Howard University Revokes Sean “Diddy” Combs’ Honorary Degree Following Release of Cassie Assault Video

June 18, 2024

Howard University announced on Friday that it would revoke Sean “Diddy” Combs’ honorary degree, originally conferred in 2014, in light of recent revelations concerning the disgraced rapper and...

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Billie Eilish Joins the Race for the Song of the Summer with "Birds of a Feather"

June 18, 2024

As summer draws near, the race for the season's signature song heats up. Just when it seemed like Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us” was poised to dominate, Billie Eilish has thrown her hat into the...

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The Decline of Pop and Club Music in the Era of Sadness

June 18, 2024

Pop and club music used to be the anthems of good times. From the infectious beats of the late '90s and early 2000s to the party-ready hits that defined the early 2010s, these genres once...

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How to Use Suno in Your Music Production Workflow (Without Losing Your Creative Edge)

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AI in music has gone from sci-fi fantasy to daily reality. Tools like Suno are now powerful enough to generate melodies, lyrics, and even full songs in seconds. That’s exciting—and controversial. Just ask Timbaland. Recently, he came under fire for reportedly using music sent to him for review to train his Suno model without permission. For many creators, that felt like crossing a line.

So here’s the big question: should you use Suno in your workflow? The answer depends on how you approach it. If you’re the type who wants to stay ahead as an early adopter—not resisting new tools but also not handing over the keys to your artistry—then Suno can be a powerful ally. The trick is making sure you’re the creator, and Suno is just a tool.

The Controversy Around AI in Music

AI has always sparked debate in creative communities. When Kanye West leaned into Auto-Tune on 808s & Heartbreak, people called it a gimmick. Now, it’s a standard tool in modern music. When Billie Eilish and Finneas started experimenting with extreme vocal layering, it sounded strange to some—but it defined an entire era of pop.

Suno is today’s version of that debate. Critics argue it’s cheating, while supporters say it’s no different than using a sampler or loop pack. Both sides have a point. The real danger is not the tool itself, but what you do with it. If you lean on AI to do everything, you’ll lose your artistic identity. But if you treat it like a collaborator that sparks ideas, you can level up without losing your voice.

Avoiding the Trap of Laziness

Here’s the truth: humans are naturally lazy. We gravitate toward the path of least resistance. That’s why preset packs, ghostwriters, and sample libraries exist. AI just happens to be the newest shortcut.

But laziness doesn’t have to be a dealbreaker. If you let Suno replace your creativity, your music will sound generic. If you use it to free up time and mental space so you can focus on the details that matter, it becomes a growth tool.

Think about Timbaland again: people weren’t upset because he used Suno. They were upset because he allegedly skipped the human respect part of the equation. That’s the risk of laziness—you cut corners that compromise trust, originality, or taste.

Why Taste Is Still Your Superpower

No matter how good AI gets, the one thing it can never replicate is your taste.

Taste is what tells you a beat feels too cluttered, a lyric feels off, or a melody makes you feel something. It’s why Pharrell can hear a loop and transform it into a global hit, while someone else might shrug it off. Suno can generate endless ideas, but only your taste can filter those ideas into something that sounds authentically you.

If you train your taste—by studying great records, experimenting with sound design, and sharpening your ear—you’ll never be outshined by an algorithm. Taste is your compass, and Suno is just one more brush in your toolkit.

How to Use Suno Without Losing Yourself

Here are four practical ways to use Suno effectively:

  1. Idea Generation – Stuck on a hook? Use Suno to spark lyrical or melodic ideas, but refine them in your own writing voice.
  2. Reference Expansion – Feed it prompts inspired by your influences (say, “Tyler, the Creator-style chords” or “Billie Eilish-inspired textures”), then study the output to see what you can learn.
  3. Arrangement Sketching – Let Suno rough out sections or moods, but rebuild them in your DAW with your own sound choices.
  4. Practice Tool – Use Suno as a sparring partner. Challenge yourself to flip its ideas into something new, or train your ear by critiquing what works and what doesn’t.

Final Thoughts

The Timbaland controversy shows the risks: if you’re lazy, careless, or disrespectful with how you use AI, it backfires. But if you’re thoughtful, disciplined, and guided by taste, Suno can be a powerful tool in your workflow.

How to Use Suno in Your Music Production Workflow (Without Losing Your Creative Edge)how-to-use-suno-in-your-music-production-workflow-without-losing-your-creative-edgeMark AndrewsSep 08, 2025Tools like Suno are now powerful enough to generate melodies, lyrics, and even full songs in seconds. That’s exciting—and controversial. Just ask Timbaland. Recently, he came under fire..