
January 6, 2022
Drake's ghostwriter controversy has been a topic of conversation since the rapper's feud with Meek Mill in 2015. Quentin Miller, a lesser-known rapper from Atlanta, was named as the ghostwriter....
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December 28, 2022
Many artists are using their personal brand and influence to educate artists, from beginners to fellow professionals. Timbaland has partnered with Masterclass to teach musicians how to make unique...
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December 7, 2022
Rina Sawayama has burst into the consciousness of queer music listeners in recent years. My first time listening to her work was Cherry, a track that is bubbly ...
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October 4, 2022
In the wake of Tiktok’s rapid expansion and growing dominance in the short-form video market, YouTube has felt the pressure to adapt to keep up with the shifting demands of its audience...
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October 5, 2022
Conan Gray is an American YouTuber turned singer-songwriter, most well-known for his songs about heartbreak and unrequited love. Throughout his career, Conan has written songs like “Crush Culture”...
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October 17, 2022
Phoebe Bridgers is an American songwriter, singer, and producer who has, in recent years, gained mainstream recognition with the release of her sophomore album “Punisher” in 2020...
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October 18, 2022
Steve Lacy is a singer, songwriter, record producer, and living proof that you don’t need the most advanced or high-tech studio equipment to create music that listeners will love...
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August 31, 2022
For the last two years, there has been something missing in the lives of music lovers around the world—live music. The advent of a global pandemic meant the absence of concerts, festivals........
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August 19, 2022
One of the biggest questions many spaces face today is how blockchain technology may overhaul industry norms, and the music industry is no exception. In particular...
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August 19, 2022
Snapchat has recently announced Snapchat Sounds Creator Fund, a monthly grant program of up to $100,000 awarded to independent artists distributing music on the platform...
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August 15, 2022
Over the past few years, TikTok’s popularity has significantly increased resulting in 1 billion global daily users by early 2022. The app has also become extremely influential in the current music....
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August 4, 2022
Charlie Puth has paired with Studio to create a 30-day online course that outlines the entire songwriting and production process for $279 USD. This hands-on learning experience has been marketed....
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Not long ago, the idea of a computer creating an entire song felt like science fiction. Now it’s becoming surprisingly common. With tools like Suno and Udio, AI-generated music is being uploaded to streaming platforms at a pace the industry has never seen before. Some of these tracks are clearly experimental, but others sound polished enough that listeners may not even realize artificial intelligence helped create them.
That sudden wave of AI music is starting to force streaming platforms to rethink how songs are categorized, credited, and recommended. If a track can be written, sung, and produced with the help of artificial intelligence, platforms have to answer a new question: what exactly counts as a “human” song?
For streaming services, the issue isn’t just creative. It’s structural. Discovery systems rely on accurate artist identities and real listener engagement. If automated songs begin flooding the system under fake or algorithm-generated artist names, it becomes harder for real musicians to reach audiences.
Because of this, platforms are exploring ways to identify or label AI-assisted tracks. The goal isn’t necessarily to remove them, but to introduce transparency so listeners understand how the music they’re hearing was made.
Even as generative tools improve, producers can often hear subtle differences between AI performances and human ones. A big reason comes down to micro-details.
Human vocals naturally include tiny imperfections. Pitch drifts slightly between notes. Timing pushes or relaxes against the beat. Breaths, pauses, and phrasing shape the emotional weight of a line.
AI systems can produce technically correct melodies, but they often struggle with those unpredictable human shifts. The result can sound clean yet strangely flat, as if something emotional is missing from the performance.
Many producers intentionally keep small imperfections in recordings because they add character. Slight timing variations create groove. Tiny pitch differences make vocals feel expressive rather than robotic.
Ironically, the very things technology once tried to remove from recordings are now the elements listeners connect with most.
Despite the debate around AI music, many artists are already treating these tools as part of the creative process rather than a replacement for it. AI can generate rough ideas, chord progressions, or demo vocals that musicians later refine with their own performance and production choices.
Music technology has always reshaped the industry, from synthesizers to Auto-Tune. Artificial intelligence may simply be the next chapter in that evolution.
What’s changing now is that streaming platforms are being forced to acknowledge it, and adapt their rules to keep music discovery fair, transparent, and human at its core.