
August 2, 2022
Whether you know Lexie Liu from her performance as Seraphine in K/DA’s “MORE” or her fourth-place finish on The Rap of China 2018, there’s no denying that the Chinese hip hop star is a global ...
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June 17, 2022
BTS is the most famous K-Pop band in the world now, and recently, they were invited to the white house to speak about anti-Asian hate crimes and inclusivity. Being the first K-Pop band to be...
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June 6, 2022
SEVENTEEN (세븐틴) is a 13 member Korean boy band under Pledis Entertainment. They are split into 3 teams, the Hip Hop unit (S.coups, Wonwoo, Mingyu, Vernon), the Vocal unit (Jeonghan, Joshua, Woozi...
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June 3, 2022
On May 20, Harry Styles released his new album Harry’s House, debuting at number one on the Billboard 200 albums chart. This is his third studio album in which all thirteen songs are in the top 30...
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May 26, 2022
The Song House is a songwriter house in Nashville, Tennessee where all levels of writers and artists come together to develop music. Every week, 12-15 songwriters are challenged to write a hook in...
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May 27, 2022
It’s been one year since the young pop-star, Olivia Rodrigo, released her first music album “Sour”. Since her debut, Olivia Rodrigo has won 3 Grammy Awards and named Women of the Year in 2022.
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March 31, 2022
After a cancelled performance at the Asuncionico festival in Paraguay Doja cat received backlash from fans claiming the singer neglected them outside of her hotel. After the many complaints from...
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April 11, 2022
After a long 4 year’s K-pop group Big Bang makes a comeback to the music scene with the song “Still Life.” This song has become another banger from the group reminding fans of the music they once...
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April 6, 2022
The first theatre production highlighting the global takeover of the K-Pop industry will be making its Broadway debut later this year, with its opening night scheduled for November 20, while...
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April 6, 2022
Over the past month, singer Ed Sheeran has been battling a copyright trial, accusing him of plagiarizing his 2017 hit song, “Shape of You” the song’s resemblance to their song, “Oh Why” Sami Chokri...
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April 5, 2022
If you’ve been on social media for the past few months, odds are you’ve probably heard of the iconic viral hit, “Leave The Door Open” by Silk Sonic on just about every corner of the internet.
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April 2, 2022
Debut: April 2022 After having competed on the reality survival show, “My Teenage Girl”, the seven-member group CLASS:y was formed, signing a seven-year contract with label, M25. The group was...
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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.