So the canned AI bandmates in Logic are that much more challenging? You know that if you write the other guy’s part it’s not jamming, right?ksandvik wrote: Sun Jun 14, 2026 5:24 am You could do that already with tools in Logic Pro X. But it means you have to do a little bit more creative thinking that writing prompts in a text window.
AI disqualifies anyone as a musician! It's like playback.
- KVRAF
- 2331 posts since 3 Sep, 2005 from Outer Bongolia
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- KVRAF
- 5163 posts since 13 Jul, 2004 from Earth
Shadow producers in 2026.
Human = Expensive but you get what you want out of a song.
AI = Cheap but you will waste a lot of time and credits in hope that it will make something that you like.
I do let AI make songs when i am bored but I won't renew my subscription when my subscription is over in October.
Reason for that is that Suno has met a wall on their latest v5.5 model so it plays the same sounds and chords and melody no matter what genre i use now.
So there is no variation there anymore and it outputs the same 2-3 songs over and over again.
Same chord progression, same sounds and over the top sound fx and other crap.
It also play in the same key progression in 95% of the songs now so it looks like the Algorithm is starting to go in circles and is slowly eating itself up.
Human = Expensive but you get what you want out of a song.
AI = Cheap but you will waste a lot of time and credits in hope that it will make something that you like.
I do let AI make songs when i am bored but I won't renew my subscription when my subscription is over in October.
Reason for that is that Suno has met a wall on their latest v5.5 model so it plays the same sounds and chords and melody no matter what genre i use now.
So there is no variation there anymore and it outputs the same 2-3 songs over and over again.
Same chord progression, same sounds and over the top sound fx and other crap.
It also play in the same key progression in 95% of the songs now so it looks like the Algorithm is starting to go in circles and is slowly eating itself up.
- GRRRRRRR!
- 17729 posts since 14 Jun, 2001 from Somewhere you're not!
I can think of half-a-dozen reasons off the top of my head:markmann wrote: Fri Jun 12, 2026 9:48 pmIf you enjoy writing songs and are confident in your songwriting, I don't see why you would ever turn that whole process over to AI.
1. I don't see songwriting as a worthwhile pursuit, in and of itself. (I also do not see it as something to "enjoy" any more than cleaning the house or putting out the bins.) To me it's just an administrative task you have to undertake if you want to have songs to perform on stage. I am every bit as happy playing covers as I am doing my own original songs.
2. It's not about me, it's about music and if I can have better songs to perform by using AI, and I absolutely can, then that's what I'll use.
3. It's been a great way of pushing us outside of our comfort zone, of trying things we wouldn't have thought to try on our own.
4. It's just a tool, like a guitar or a piano or a synthesiser.
5. It's been a far more exciting and enjoyable experience/process for us than working in the way we have been working for most of the last 30 years.
6. You have to be willing to try new things if you want to learn and grow as an artist.
So why not let it? It's only your ego that prevents you from going all-in.But AI as a creative partner can help you take things in very interesting directions you might not have considered.
Again, that's just ego and I'd suggest it is holding you back.I'm never tempted to use the AI's ideas without significantly changing them.
We go the other way, we add parts to what the AI has already generated to flesh out the arrangements, make them sound more like us and add a bit of extra interest to proceedings.Also, AI could be helpful to create instrumental parts for songs you've already written completely.
So what? Do you think you're such a songwriting genius that your music is worth anything to anyone? For a third time, you're letting your ego get in the way of logic and reality.... (which essentially gives Suno the rights to your song).
Maybe to you but not to me. The "fun", if you want to call it that, is in getting up on stage and performing the music. Where the music comes from, how it comes about, is of no importance to me at all.
I dunno, maybe you'd do something worth sharing? If you don't try, you'll never know.I can't imagine using AI to generate music for me. What would the point of that be?
I've been writing songs for 45 years and I can't say I've ever done any of that bullshit. Melodies? Harmonies? Progressions? WTF!?!Pulling from the void and life's inspirations to write melodies, harmonies, interesting progressions, etc.
Again, maybe for you but I've never found that to be the case. In fact, I definitely get greater a greater sense of accomplishment from working up a MIDI file into a cover version I am happy with than I ever got from writing my own songs the old fashioned way. It feels like more of a challenge to me, to do right by something you like, created by someone you rate. But I/we have really enjoyed working on/with the AI generated songs we've made with Tunee. It's been the most enjoyable album-making experience of my "career" and, weirdly, it feels like the one where I've had to make the least compromises to get the result I/we have been chasing. It has freed us, to a degree, from the constraints of our tiny minds, allowing us to paint with a much broader palette. I honestly don't understand why you'd let your ego dictate that you have to do it all yourself. It's madness.... in the end create a real sense of accomplishment and artistic fulfillment.
That's exactly what you get by writing prompts for AI. In the hands of someone who knows what they are doing, and has the bucketloads of patience required, what the AI creates can be as pure an expression of the prompter's "personal artistic identity" as anything else. How can you not see that?moonwalker wrote: Sat Jun 13, 2026 10:20 pmWhat's great about that is through those jam sessions your understanding, even if just intuitively, will improve and you can then further explore writing those ideas in ways that fit your personal artistic identity.
If you honestly believe that, then you should stay away from AI because you'll do a shithouse job of it. Getting the AI to do what you want it to require a level of creative thinking you probably don't possess. I don't think I do, either, but my bandmate is an absolute f**king ninja with it.ksandvik wrote: Sun Jun 14, 2026 5:24 amYou could do that already with tools in Logic Pro X. But it means you have to do a little bit more creative thinking that writing prompts in a text window.
You reckon? That's not been my experience working with producers. You have to be lucky to find someone who can really help you realise your artistic vision.
That's where the hard work comes in. It's not wasted time or credits if the results are worthwhile.AI = Cheap but you will waste a lot of time and credits in hope that it will make something that you like.
We got to the same point with Tunee before they changed to different AI providers. The new models they have access to are worthless, although we did manage to get one song out of them. It seems we might have lucked out with our timing.Reason for that is that Suno has met a wall on their latest v5.5 model so it plays the same sounds and chords and melody no matter what genre i use now.
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Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron