whyterabbyt wrote:You werent expecting naysaying based on the actual state of modern AI technologies, were you?
(I always enjoy your piercing to-the-point comments. No sarcasm here, I really do.)
whyterabbyt wrote:You werent expecting naysaying based on the actual state of modern AI technologies, were you?
In 1999 Bentley was approached by a group of musicians and developers who wanted to generate novel
music through digital evolution. Dance music was popular at the time, so the team aimed to evolve novel
dance tracks. They set different collections of number-one dance hits as targets, i.e. an evolving track
would be scored higher the more it resembled the targets. The evolved results, 8-bar music samples, were
evaluated by a musician who selected the ones to be combined into an overall piece, which was then
professionally produced according to the evolved music score. The results were surprisingly good: the
evolved tracks incorporated complex drum rhythms with interesting accompanying melodies and bass lines.
Using bands such as The Prodigy as targets, digital evolution was able to produce intricate novel dance
tracks with clear stylistic resemblance.
In 2000 the group formed a record label named J13 Records. A highly specialized distribution contract
was drawn up and signed with Universal Music, stipulating that the true source of the music should not be
revealed, even to the distributors (because Universal Music’s CEO believed that no-one would want to buy
computer-generated music). Sworn to secrecy, the companies produced several dance tracks together, some of which were then taken by other music producers and remixed. Some of the music was successful in dance clubs, with the clubgoers having no idea that key pieces of the tracks they were dancing to were
authored by computers.
C'mon, its artificial intelligence, not artificial cruelty.vurt wrote:so skynet will be writing the end credits for the human race and the nanobots in the chemtrails will reprogram us to enjoy coldplay
Well, there are some interesting reactions. Thanks to everyone who shared their thoughts on it.Cinebient wrote:So is the OP happy with the answers?
vs.
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Woah, did this really happen ?! Tried looking up J13 Records to find more details and the only thing I can see mentioned is the name of the owner: https://www.bizseek.co.uk/j13-records-limitedwhyterabbyt wrote:(Cheers!)
Coincientally to this thread, here's an excerpt from a paper that got a bit of interest elsewhere today, about the unexpected behaviours that a-life type systems have thrown up.
In 1999 Bentley was approached by a group of musicians and developers who wanted to generate novel
music through digital evolution. Dance music was popular at the time, so the team aimed to evolve novel
dance tracks. They set different collections of number-one dance hits as targets, i.e. an evolving track
would be scored higher the more it resembled the targets. The evolved results, 8-bar music samples, were
evaluated by a musician who selected the ones to be combined into an overall piece, which was then
professionally produced according to the evolved music score. The results were surprisingly good: the
evolved tracks incorporated complex drum rhythms with interesting accompanying melodies and bass lines.
Using bands such as The Prodigy as targets, digital evolution was able to produce intricate novel dance
tracks with clear stylistic resemblance.
In 2000 the group formed a record label named J13 Records. A highly specialized distribution contract
was drawn up and signed with Universal Music, stipulating that the true source of the music should not be
revealed, even to the distributors (because Universal Music’s CEO believed that no-one would want to buy
computer-generated music). Sworn to secrecy, the companies produced several dance tracks together, some of which were then taken by other music producers and remixed. Some of the music was successful in dance clubs, with the clubgoers having no idea that key pieces of the tracks they were dancing to were
authored by computers.
Looks like it. Ive found other references to it eg in the book "The Genie in the Machine"mcbpete wrote:Woah, did this really happen ?! Tried looking up J13 Records to find more details and the only thing I can see mentioned is the name of the owner: https://www.bizseek.co.uk/j13-records-limited
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