Burn/138bpm/Trance
- KVRAF
- 14225 posts since 20 Nov, 2003 from Lost and Spaced
This is where you chop up your original version and discard half the lyrics. I like it, but I think I mixed it too wide.
or
https://open.spotify.com/album/1mZYfozJ ... tB4eSRvXkQ
or
https://open.spotify.com/album/1mZYfozJ ... tB4eSRvXkQ
- KVRAF
- 23011 posts since 8 Oct, 2014
I saw this wasn't getting any love so I thought I would give it a listen. Very well mixed and produced. Love the vocals. I won't ask how you did this because there is no way I could come close. LOL.
Well done. Really enjoyed listening to this.
Well done. Really enjoyed listening to this.
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 14225 posts since 20 Nov, 2003 from Lost and Spaced
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ChameleonMusic ChameleonMusic https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=430348
- KVRAF
- 1925 posts since 23 Nov, 2018 from Birmingham, UK
So, how much of this music is AI-generated?
Just asking as it contains a number of classic AI-algorithm elements, so I ran it through 2 high-level university music dept AI checkers and they said:
AI content: 75% or more
AI content: between 70% and 100%
I then asked YouTube for their opinion and got the following response:
Yes, "Burn" by IllekTrikOne is widely recognized as an AI-generated electronic dance music (EDM) track.
While IllekTrikOne maintains an artist presence on platforms like Spotify, Shazam, and the KVR Audio forum—where the entity engages with the electronic music community—this specific track has been identified in various contexts as a prime example of fully automated AI music production.
Just asking as it contains a number of classic AI-algorithm elements, so I ran it through 2 high-level university music dept AI checkers and they said:
AI content: 75% or more
AI content: between 70% and 100%
I then asked YouTube for their opinion and got the following response:
Yes, "Burn" by IllekTrikOne is widely recognized as an AI-generated electronic dance music (EDM) track.
While IllekTrikOne maintains an artist presence on platforms like Spotify, Shazam, and the KVR Audio forum—where the entity engages with the electronic music community—this specific track has been identified in various contexts as a prime example of fully automated AI music production.
Last edited by ChameleonMusic on Tue May 26, 2026 10:45 am, edited 1 time in total.
Mark Taylor, Chameleon Music - Professional composition and sound design for all media since 1994.
https://www.chameleonmusic.co.uk/
https://www.chameleonmusic.co.uk/
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 14225 posts since 20 Nov, 2003 from Lost and Spaced
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ChameleonMusic ChameleonMusic https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=430348
- KVRAF
- 1925 posts since 23 Nov, 2018 from Birmingham, UK
Not quite sure why you think my question was ''fantastic''?
From my experience when someone admits to 50% in a situation like this it normally means a significant bit more?
I would say from my analysis - at least 70%...possibly up to 100%?
Either way...
You should definitely declare to potential listeners on a forum such as this that you've used AI tech!
Any other approach is simply dishonest!
In simple terms it let's us know upfront that the music has not actually been composed and produced by you, but (at least in significant part) by an algorithm that requires very little / no musical & music tech skill on your part.
Mark Taylor, Chameleon Music - Professional composition and sound design for all media since 1994.
https://www.chameleonmusic.co.uk/
https://www.chameleonmusic.co.uk/
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 14225 posts since 20 Nov, 2003 from Lost and Spaced
It was disclosed on the distribution end. I appreciate the forensic investigation into my obscure trance track.
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ChameleonMusic ChameleonMusic https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=430348
- KVRAF
- 1925 posts since 23 Nov, 2018 from Birmingham, UK
First statement above = Irrelevant on a forum such as this as we don't have access to that information!osiris wrote: Sat May 23, 2026 4:58 pm It was disclosed on the distribution end. I appreciate the forensic investigation into my obscure trance track.
You have to make a full AI disclosure to your distributor (DistroKid) so I'd be mildly curious about exactly what you declared as AI in this case?
Vocals, lyrics, melody, or instrumentation, certain parts of the track or the entire audio?
The reason for the above disclosure is for transparency on streaming sites - so that they can declare how a particular track was made...can't see that info on your tracks on Spotify?
Second statement above - nothing forensic about it, it just sounded like AI in various ways from the first listen:
Eerily polished at first and then little issues crept in such as - artifacts behind the vocals; loss of some high frequency details at times; issues with the arrangement - particularly lack of any rhythmic tension / variation; micro glitches / dropouts where the algorithm has ''stitched'' together different data-mined ideas / too perfect rhythmic elements with no programmed (or played) human adjustments. etc
...and I then spent about 5 minutes looking a bit deeper.
Mark Taylor, Chameleon Music - Professional composition and sound design for all media since 1994.
https://www.chameleonmusic.co.uk/
https://www.chameleonmusic.co.uk/
- KVRist
- 447 posts since 14 Jan, 2026 from United Kingdom
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 14225 posts since 20 Nov, 2003 from Lost and Spaced
Please don't talk about me in the third person like I'm your demented grandparent, I did create this.
I wrote the lyrics, I made the demo track, and the AI worked from material I created. It didn’t appear out of thin air. What I said was absolutely true. I did a version of this, wasn't happy with it, so I did an AI assist that made a better track.
I also find it ironic that people are using AI detectors as if they’re definitive proof of something when even the detectors can’t agree. I tested the same track with three different systems and got three wildly different results — 60%, 70%, and 90%. It's probably closer to 40%. I think reactions like this are part of why many DAWs have been cautious about deeply integrating AI features. There’s still a “villagers with pitchforks” mentality anytime someone mentions AI-assisted creativity, even though it's evolving every day.
You wouldn't say: This is a purchased Sample Pack, which I have used before also. I'm just counting the days until some loops someone gets off the Cloud are going to be clocked as AI.
Nobody has to personally like AI-assisted music, but acting like there’s zero human creativity involved just isn’t accurate in my case.
I wrote the lyrics, I made the demo track, and the AI worked from material I created. It didn’t appear out of thin air. What I said was absolutely true. I did a version of this, wasn't happy with it, so I did an AI assist that made a better track.
I also find it ironic that people are using AI detectors as if they’re definitive proof of something when even the detectors can’t agree. I tested the same track with three different systems and got three wildly different results — 60%, 70%, and 90%. It's probably closer to 40%. I think reactions like this are part of why many DAWs have been cautious about deeply integrating AI features. There’s still a “villagers with pitchforks” mentality anytime someone mentions AI-assisted creativity, even though it's evolving every day.
You wouldn't say: This is a purchased Sample Pack, which I have used before also. I'm just counting the days until some loops someone gets off the Cloud are going to be clocked as AI.
Nobody has to personally like AI-assisted music, but acting like there’s zero human creativity involved just isn’t accurate in my case.
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 14225 posts since 20 Nov, 2003 from Lost and Spaced
I also think you should temper your judgement. This is a new track I'm working on. It was done ENTIRELY by me. I ran it through 4 AI detectors and only 1 got it correct, with one saying it was 90% AI and one even incorrectly saying the old version of Suno detected. Take of the what you will.
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ChameleonMusic ChameleonMusic https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=430348
- KVRAF
- 1925 posts since 23 Nov, 2018 from Birmingham, UK
Thought this discussion had run it's course? No idea why anyone had to reopen it...we had a reasonably open discussion...points made...all done?
2) Yes, I agree that Free AI music detectors are no proof of anything, but they do err on the side of caution for various reasons.
3) I didn't base my anlaysis on the AI detector at first, but on what I could hear in the track.
4) I didn't use free detectors, but much more sophisticated ones used to detect AI in music student work at uni.
Just for the record - one of the many reasons is what you said here: ''it's evolving everyday''...not always in the right ways...there have been some quite bizarre episodes with AI interventions on the mixing front so far...sometimes it learns in a very weird way!
Understood, but my main point above was that you didn't declare this at all!?
Ditto my above point + off course...why didn't you try and make it a better track with your own skills and knowledge?
1) 60 / 70 /90% are not wildly different - they point to a clearly significant amount of AI input.osiris wrote: Thu May 28, 2026 1:44 pm I also find it ironic that people are using AI detectors as if they’re definitive proof of something when even the detectors can’t agree. I tested the same track with three different systems and got three wildly different results — 60%, 70%, and 90%.
2) Yes, I agree that Free AI music detectors are no proof of anything, but they do err on the side of caution for various reasons.
3) I didn't base my anlaysis on the AI detector at first, but on what I could hear in the track.
4) I didn't use free detectors, but much more sophisticated ones used to detect AI in music student work at uni.
You said 50% last time...hmmm! Even if that was accurate, it's still a helluva lot of the piece ain't you!
The reasons for reluctance regarding the integration of AI into DAWs are very complex and very little to do with your silly “villagers with pitchforks” comment...the idea that someone who's been in the industry professionally since 1994 and runs his own music studio is a techno luddite - don't start lashing out...makes you sound ultra-defensive.osiris wrote: Thu May 28, 2026 1:44 pm I think reactions like this are part of why many DAWs have been cautious about deeply integrating AI features. There’s still a “villagers with pitchforks” mentality anytime someone mentions AI-assisted creativity, even though it's evolving every day.
Just for the record - one of the many reasons is what you said here: ''it's evolving everyday''...not always in the right ways...there have been some quite bizarre episodes with AI interventions on the mixing front so far...sometimes it learns in a very weird way!
Actually I would (and have on here) if the piece was full of such preset loops/ hits and other musical ideas with not enough input from the person.
Never said that - just want people to be honest at the start and say they've used AI and how they've used AI so we can listen fully informed.osiris wrote: Thu May 28, 2026 1:44 pm but acting like there’s zero human creativity involved just isn’t accurate in my case.
Mark Taylor, Chameleon Music - Professional composition and sound design for all media since 1994.
https://www.chameleonmusic.co.uk/
https://www.chameleonmusic.co.uk/
- KVRist
- 447 posts since 14 Jan, 2026 from United Kingdom
+1ChameleonMusic wrote: Thu May 28, 2026 4:47 pm Thought this discussion had run it's course? No idea why anyone had to reopen it...we had a reasonably open discussion...points made...all done?
Understood, but my main point above was that you didn't declare this at all!?
Ditto my above point + off course...why didn't you try and make it a better track with your own skills and knowledge?
1) 60 / 70 /90% are not wildly different - they point to a clearly significant amount of AI input.osiris wrote: Thu May 28, 2026 1:44 pm I also find it ironic that people are using AI detectors as if they’re definitive proof of something when even the detectors can’t agree. I tested the same track with three different systems and got three wildly different results — 60%, 70%, and 90%.
2) Yes, I agree that Free AI music detectors are no proof of anything, but they do err on the side of caution for various reasons.
3) I didn't base my anlaysis on the AI detector at first, but on what I could hear in the track.
4) I didn't use free detectors, but much more sophisticated ones used to detect AI in music student work at uni.
You said 50% last time...hmmm! Even if that was accurate, it's still a helluva lot of the piece ain't you!
The reasons for reluctance regarding the integration of AI into DAWs are very complex and very little to do with your silly “villagers with pitchforks” comment...the idea that someone who's been in the industry professionally since 1994 and runs his own music studio is a techno luddite - don't start lashing out...makes you sound ultra-defensive.osiris wrote: Thu May 28, 2026 1:44 pm I think reactions like this are part of why many DAWs have been cautious about deeply integrating AI features. There’s still a “villagers with pitchforks” mentality anytime someone mentions AI-assisted creativity, even though it's evolving every day.
Just for the record - one of the many reasons is what you said here: ''it's evolving everyday''...not always in the right ways...there have been some quite bizarre episodes with AI interventions on the mixing front so far...sometimes it learns in a very weird way!
Actually I would (and have on here) if the piece was full of such preset loops/ hits and other musical ideas with not enough input from the person.
Never said that - just want people to be honest at the start and say they've used AI and how they've used AI so we can listen fully informed.osiris wrote: Thu May 28, 2026 1:44 pm but acting like there’s zero human creativity involved just isn’t accurate in my case.