.png)
July 16, 2025
This July, the Polaris Music Prize jury unveiled its 10-album shortlist for 2025—a list led numerically by Quebec acts but featuring four shining entries from Toronto. For a city whose scene often...
Read more.png)
July 16, 2025
What happens when a fictional K-pop boy band outsells the real ones? In a twist straight out of a dystopian idol fanfic, the animated groups Huntr/x and Saja Boys—created for Netflix’s explosive...
Read more.png)
July 16, 2025
Drunk calls. Crying in the dark. Lingering heartbreak. Conan Gray’s new single “Vodka Cranberry” isn’t just a song—it’s a full-blown emotional unraveling, and fans are already bracing themselves...
Read more.png)
July 15, 2025
Andrew Choi was already a hidden force in real-world K-pop before becoming Jinu, the soulful lead of the animated boy band Saja Boys, a member of the K-Pop Demon Hunters. Choi co-wrote the quiet....
Read more.png)
July 13, 2025
Let’s be honest: when most pop stars go quiet, we assume they’re recharging in Bali, journaling in silk robes. Not Justin Bieber. Nah, he went into full stealth mode, dropped a random “SWAG”...
Read more.png)
July 13, 2025
It’s official: KATSEYE didn’t just sell out, they served out. Every single ticket to their upcoming live shows? Gone. Vamoosed. Snatched like a wig in a wind tunnel.The global girl group, part...
Read more.png)
July 13, 2025
Cue the frosted tips, cargo pants, and emotional harmonies, because the Backstreet Boys just dropped Millennium 2.0, and let’s just say, everybody (yeahhh!) is losing their minds.Yes, that’s right...
Read more.png)
July 13, 2025
Tyla just slid into our summer soundtrack with her new track “IS IT”, and let me tell you, it is everything. No cap. Straight off the jump, you get those booming amapiano kicks and warped vocal...
Read more.png)
July 13, 2025
The wait is officially over: Blackpink is back—louder, bolder, and more united than ever. On the opening night of their highly anticipated Deadline World Tour, the global K-pop phenomenon debuted...
Read more.png)
July 13, 2025
Justin Bieber has never been a stranger to the spotlight—but this time, the glare feels more personal. In a series of emotional posts, the global superstar cracked open the curated image fans often...
Read more.png)
July 13, 2025
When Coldplay’s Chris Martin looked out into the crowd at Toronto’s brand-new Rogers Stadium on July 8 and joked, “This is a very bizarre stadium a million miles from Earth,” we all laughed—but he...
Read more.png)
July 13, 2025
When Velvet Sundown burst onto Spotify earlier this summer, few suspected that the band’s four “members” were never flesh and blood. With their ’60s-inspired riffs and dreamy vocal harmonies, the...
Read more.png)
When Velvet Sundown burst onto Spotify earlier this summer, few suspected that the band’s four “members” were never flesh and blood. With their ’60s-inspired riffs and dreamy vocal harmonies, the digital quartet quickly amassed over a million monthly listeners, fueled by the viral success of their debut single “Dust on the Wind.” Only on July 8, 2025, did Velvet Sundown finally own up to what many fans had begun to suspect: they are an entirely AI-generated project “an ongoing artistic provocation” designed to blur the boundaries between real and synthetic creativity.
Velvet Sundown released their first album, Floating on Echoes, on June 5, 2025, marketing it with faux vintage photos and enigmatic social-media teasers. Listeners loved the band’s nostalgic sound, and streaming figures skyrocketed. Yet as questions arose Why could no one find interviews with the members? Why did their online images look subtly “off,” with hands that seemed oddly shaped? critics grew skeptical. The final nail in the coffin came when fans noticed Velvet Sundown’s Spotify bio had been quietly updated to confess the truth: “All characters, stories, music, voices and lyrics are original creations generated with the assistance of artificial intelligence tools employed as creative instruments”.
The revelation has ignited a wider debate in the music world. Proponents of AI-assisted creativity argue that tools like generative audio and image algorithms can open new frontiers providing artists with fresh palettes and speeding up production. Detractors warn that such projects undermine the authenticity central to musical culture, potentially eroding listeners’ trust and displacing human musicians. A landmark December report by the International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers (CISAC) even predicted that AI-generated music could shrink artists’ incomes by over 20% within four years if left unchecked.
Major streaming platforms have responded cautiously. Spotify maintains that it neither prioritizes nor profits directly from AI-generated tracks, noting that all uploads come from licensed third parties. Meanwhile, rival service Deezer has begun flagging AI-created songs, warning listeners that some Velvet Sundown tracks “may have been created using artificial intelligence” and deploying detection tools to spot generative audio models in the uploads.
Velvet Sundown’s creators describe the project as an “ongoing artistic provocation,” inviting listeners to question what makes music “real.” Is the emotional impact of a riff any less genuine if a neural network composed it? Some fans have embraced the experiment, praising the band’s catchy melodies regardless of their synthetic origins. Others feel cheated, betrayed by the illusion of human connection that music often provides. Critics like author Steven Hyden have noted that while the band’s songs hit familiar classic-rock tropes, they lack the unpredictable spark that comes from human imperfection, making them feel unnervingly generic.
Beyond artistic concerns, the Velvet Sundown saga raises practical and ethical questions: Who owns the copyright when an AI generates a song? How should royalties be distributed? Could entirely AI-created acts flood streaming platforms, making it harder for real musicians to stand out? The industry is only beginning to grapple with these challenges, balancing innovation with safeguards to ensure that genuine human artistry isn’t sidelined.
Despite the controversy, Velvet Sundown plans to press on. Their second album, Paper Sun Rebellion, is slated for release on July 14, and they’ve hinted at AI-curated virtual concerts in the fall. Whether listeners will continue to tune in once the novelty fades or whether a backlash will prompt streaming services to tighten their AI-content policies remains to be seen.
One thing is certain: Velvet Sundown has forced the music world to confront the question of authenticity head-on. As AI tools become ever more capable, artists, platforms, and audiences will need clear guidelines and open dialogue to navigate a landscape where the line between human and machine composition grows increasingly thin. Whatever the outcome, this AI-driven experiment has already rewritten a page in music history proving that, in the digital age, even our most cherished art forms can be reimagined in ways we never expected.