Looks like someone snitched. I don't know who though.
AI disqualifies anyone as a musician! It's like playback.
- KVRian
- 501 posts since 14 Jan, 2026 from United Kingdom
- KVRian
- 655 posts since 10 Jan, 2026
Of course not
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- KVRian
- 633 posts since 18 May, 2020
#FREEBONES
REAPER + Davinci Resolve Pro on Manjaro KDE. Neve 88m. Focusrite 18i20 2nd gen. Neumann NDH30 headphones. Mics: Telefunken TF39, AT4050, Miktek C7e, EV RE-15. VSTs: u-he Hive 2, F'em, Renoise Redux, Apisonic Speedrum 2.
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- KVRAF
- 16824 posts since 13 Oct, 2009
So? I just want to push back on this because you seem to be overstating this just a bit. I have paid more for some plugins that I have barely used than I did for one year of Suno. I think that you have to quantify fairly what people are getting out of it. My year of Suno cost about the same as two pizzas on a black friday sale. That's about where I value it. I think we might have ordered pizza the same night, but, for fun, we'll assume that I did. The pizzas would have been fine. I enjoyed them, but honestly, not as much fun as I've had trolling you lot with a few gems. As far as return, I've used it in ways that gave value to someone else in a work context and that netted appreciation that accrues to my reputation, not money. It strikes me that your math might be focused on a commercial take on music. You see it like a professional subscription that needs to justify itself. I don't think even people who are using it in that way take the same view. They think that it's an investment into their "music career", much like most of KVR does with their plugin and music distributor costs.D-Fusion wrote: Thu Jul 16, 2026 12:54 pm Suno gets a lot of money from it's userbase while 99.9% of the userbase ends up with paying more than they get in return as a Suno user.
I think that more than a few users see it as I do and the return is measured differently. It's entertainment, not vocation.
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- KVRian
- 633 posts since 18 May, 2020
Do any of those suno videos you posted have any views?
REAPER + Davinci Resolve Pro on Manjaro KDE. Neve 88m. Focusrite 18i20 2nd gen. Neumann NDH30 headphones. Mics: Telefunken TF39, AT4050, Miktek C7e, EV RE-15. VSTs: u-he Hive 2, F'em, Renoise Redux, Apisonic Speedrum 2.
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 3379 posts since 19 Mar, 2008 from germany
I am amazed and delighted that this thread is so popular — and is
attracting so much attention.
Bones
-----------------------------
Bones has a very choleric temperament, to which he gives free
rein in his posts, thereby shredding the central thread of many
discussions. Deciding whether or not to suspend him is, ultimately,
a highly subjective matter.
Theme
-----------------------------
But back to the topic: This thread is not about individual AIs (Suno,
Udio, Boomy, Riffusion, Bandlab, ...) and exactly how their stock
prices might perform.
This thread deals generally with the ethical significance of using AI
to create new content in music (and art).
In doing so, we have to exclude those who "re-enact" — that is,
musicians who play covers or interpret other people's songs, or
actors who perform plays written by others. After all, they are
"performing artists."
But for "creative artists," the situation is quite different. Their
genuine activity is precisely the recreation of songs — or the
new creation of images, texts, sculptures, or installations.
When these "musicians" or "artists" leave the creative process
itself — wholly or even just partially — to AI, they are abandoning their
own identity. For they are delegating the most important and most
human aspect of all to the machine, to AI!
If you, as a musician, don't create the notes, the melody, or the riff
yourself, what role do you still play? You could promptly say, "I want
to hear a danceable song with synth bass now." The AI will then do
it in seconds. Similarly, you could put in a CD of a bass-synth band.
That happens just as quickly, and the song isn't created by you either.
With AI, you're making a pact with the devil, because the AI is doing
the most important thing for you. For as a "creative musician," you
have completely bowed out.
It is exactly the same in the visual arts: the essence of art — much
like composing music — is the personal, human act of creation, with
all its emotions, doubts, and attempts. Leaving this to an AI amounts
to a total surrender of the genuinely human element within yourself.
attracting so much attention.
Bones
-----------------------------
Bones has a very choleric temperament, to which he gives free
rein in his posts, thereby shredding the central thread of many
discussions. Deciding whether or not to suspend him is, ultimately,
a highly subjective matter.
Theme
-----------------------------
But back to the topic: This thread is not about individual AIs (Suno,
Udio, Boomy, Riffusion, Bandlab, ...) and exactly how their stock
prices might perform.
This thread deals generally with the ethical significance of using AI
to create new content in music (and art).
In doing so, we have to exclude those who "re-enact" — that is,
musicians who play covers or interpret other people's songs, or
actors who perform plays written by others. After all, they are
"performing artists."
But for "creative artists," the situation is quite different. Their
genuine activity is precisely the recreation of songs — or the
new creation of images, texts, sculptures, or installations.
When these "musicians" or "artists" leave the creative process
itself — wholly or even just partially — to AI, they are abandoning their
own identity. For they are delegating the most important and most
human aspect of all to the machine, to AI!
If you, as a musician, don't create the notes, the melody, or the riff
yourself, what role do you still play? You could promptly say, "I want
to hear a danceable song with synth bass now." The AI will then do
it in seconds. Similarly, you could put in a CD of a bass-synth band.
That happens just as quickly, and the song isn't created by you either.
With AI, you're making a pact with the devil, because the AI is doing
the most important thing for you. For as a "creative musician," you
have completely bowed out.
It is exactly the same in the visual arts: the essence of art — much
like composing music — is the personal, human act of creation, with
all its emotions, doubts, and attempts. Leaving this to an AI amounts
to a total surrender of the genuinely human element within yourself.
free mp3s + info: andy-enroe.de songs + weird stuff: enroe.de
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- KVRAF
- 5240 posts since 13 Jul, 2004 from Earth
The post i made was made as a reply to the discussion i had with Bones where he constantly tried to find something to attack me with via quotes just because i called him out for miss quoting me in one of his posts so then he started to find some other post i made and went in attack mode on that one instead and it was on his last attack post i replied with the post you quoted.ghettosynth wrote: Thu Jul 16, 2026 7:07 pmSo? I just want to push back on this because you seem to be overstating this just a bit. I have paid more for some plugins that I have barely used than I did for one year of Suno. I think that you have to quantify fairly what people are getting out of it. My year of Suno cost about the same as two pizzas on a black friday sale. That's about where I value it. I think we might have ordered pizza the same night, but, for fun, we'll assume that I did. The pizzas would have been fine. I enjoyed them, but honestly, not as much fun as I've had trolling you lot with a few gems. As far as return, I've used it in ways that gave value to someone else in a work context and that netted appreciation that accrues to my reputation, not money. It strikes me that your math might be focused on a commercial take on music. You see it like a professional subscription that needs to justify itself. I don't think even people who are using it in that way take the same view. They think that it's an investment into their "music career", much like most of KVR does with their plugin and music distributor costs.D-Fusion wrote: Thu Jul 16, 2026 12:54 pm Suno gets a lot of money from it's userbase while 99.9% of the userbase ends up with paying more than they get in return as a Suno user.
I think that more than a few users see it as I do and the return is measured differently. It's entertainment, not vocation.
Seems like some people have a problem with following a whole thread and read the room before posting these days.
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- KVRAF
- 16824 posts since 13 Oct, 2009
I understand that, but it doesn't change my challenge to the premise in general. I don't think that you're right about what users get out of Suno. This has nothing to do with who is misquoting who, and doesn't need me to read the entire conversation to contribute to the discussion.D-Fusion wrote: Thu Jul 16, 2026 8:06 pmThe post i made was made as a reply to the discussion i had with Bones where he constantly tried to find something to attack me with via quotes just because i called him out for miss quoting me in one of his posts so then he started to find some other post i made and went in attack mode on that one instead and it was on his last attack post i replied with the post you quoted.ghettosynth wrote: Thu Jul 16, 2026 7:07 pmSo? I just want to push back on this because you seem to be overstating this just a bit. I have paid more for some plugins that I have barely used than I did for one year of Suno. I think that you have to quantify fairly what people are getting out of it. My year of Suno cost about the same as two pizzas on a black friday sale. That's about where I value it. I think we might have ordered pizza the same night, but, for fun, we'll assume that I did. The pizzas would have been fine. I enjoyed them, but honestly, not as much fun as I've had trolling you lot with a few gems. As far as return, I've used it in ways that gave value to someone else in a work context and that netted appreciation that accrues to my reputation, not money. It strikes me that your math might be focused on a commercial take on music. You see it like a professional subscription that needs to justify itself. I don't think even people who are using it in that way take the same view. They think that it's an investment into their "music career", much like most of KVR does with their plugin and music distributor costs.D-Fusion wrote: Thu Jul 16, 2026 12:54 pm Suno gets a lot of money from it's userbase while 99.9% of the userbase ends up with paying more than they get in return as a Suno user.
I think that more than a few users see it as I do and the return is measured differently. It's entertainment, not vocation.
Seems like some people have a problem with following a whole thread and read the room before posting these days.
I don't have a problem following a thread, but, I don't need to follow the entire thread to address a point. If it's out of context, then state the context. I'm not "attacking" anyone, I'm just trying to have a conversation that is in that balanced lane between AI is destroying the word and AI is going to bring us utopia.
At any rate, I think that KVR is largely wrong about Suno and the like. That business model has been around for decades, Suno is the Baldwin Fun Machine on steroids and it doesn't really matter what musicians think about it, people do get joy from using it to convert an idea into a finished track. I think that the mistake here is projecting your use cases onto the consumers engaging with the product.
Whether or not it survives long term is a function of a number of pressures, and I'm not predicting that it, specifically will, but the idea that technology can simplify music creation will continue to be a viable business in some form.
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- KVRAF
- 5240 posts since 13 Jul, 2004 from Earth
I don't have anything against AI and i do use it for fun sometimes and people should use the things that brings them joyghettosynth wrote: Thu Jul 16, 2026 9:24 pmI understand that, but it doesn't change my challenge to the premise in general. I don't think that you're right about what users get out of Suno. This has nothing to do with who is misquoting who, and doesn't need me to read the entire conversation to contribute to the discussion.D-Fusion wrote: Thu Jul 16, 2026 8:06 pmThe post i made was made as a reply to the discussion i had with Bones where he constantly tried to find something to attack me with via quotes just because i called him out for miss quoting me in one of his posts so then he started to find some other post i made and went in attack mode on that one instead and it was on his last attack post i replied with the post you quoted.ghettosynth wrote: Thu Jul 16, 2026 7:07 pmSo? I just want to push back on this because you seem to be overstating this just a bit. I have paid more for some plugins that I have barely used than I did for one year of Suno. I think that you have to quantify fairly what people are getting out of it. My year of Suno cost about the same as two pizzas on a black friday sale. That's about where I value it. I think we might have ordered pizza the same night, but, for fun, we'll assume that I did. The pizzas would have been fine. I enjoyed them, but honestly, not as much fun as I've had trolling you lot with a few gems. As far as return, I've used it in ways that gave value to someone else in a work context and that netted appreciation that accrues to my reputation, not money. It strikes me that your math might be focused on a commercial take on music. You see it like a professional subscription that needs to justify itself. I don't think even people who are using it in that way take the same view. They think that it's an investment into their "music career", much like most of KVR does with their plugin and music distributor costs.D-Fusion wrote: Thu Jul 16, 2026 12:54 pm Suno gets a lot of money from it's userbase while 99.9% of the userbase ends up with paying more than they get in return as a Suno user.
I think that more than a few users see it as I do and the return is measured differently. It's entertainment, not vocation.
Seems like some people have a problem with following a whole thread and read the room before posting these days.
I don't have a problem following a thread, but, I don't need to follow the entire thread to address a point. If it's out of context, then state the context. I'm not "attacking" anyone, I'm just trying to have a conversation that is in that balanced lane between AI is destroying the word and AI is going to bring us utopia.
At any rate, I think that KVR is largely wrong about Suno and the like. That business model has been around for decades, Suno is the Baldwin Fun Machine on steroids and it doesn't really matter what musicians think about it, people do get joy from using it to convert an idea into a finished track. I think that the mistake here is projecting your use cases onto the consumers engaging with the product.
Whether or not it survives long term is a function of a number of pressures, and I'm not predicting that it, specifically will, but the idea that technology can simplify music creation will continue to be a viable business in some form.
For me it feels more like a musical version of a slotmachine where you hit the jackpot after using a few credits.
Suno should have made it so you could sell your tracks on the Suno platform and earn a little from streamed songs
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- KVRAF
- 16824 posts since 13 Oct, 2009
No.
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- KVRist
- 91 posts since 23 Aug, 2004
ghettosynth kind of alluded to it but I also think this kind of again reveals a misunderstanding who Suno is primarily directed at (which I've already mentioned in the Suno thread). It isn't professional musicians (although no doubt in my mind that songwriters in the Pop or Hip Hop industry - or anywhere where there is less of a mental barrier for "just taking stuff and running with it" - are already using it at least for ideation), it's the same people who turn on Netflix "just to watch something to pass the time".enroe wrote: Thu Jul 16, 2026 8:04 pm
If you, as a musician, don't create the notes, the melody, or the riff
yourself, what role do you still play? You could promptly say, "I want
to hear a danceable song with synth bass now." The AI will then do
it in seconds. Similarly, you could put in a CD of a bass-synth band.
That happens just as quickly, and the song isn't created by you either.
With AI, you're making a pact with the devil, because the AI is doing
the most important thing for you. For as a "creative musician," you
have completely bowed out.![]()
These people already do not really care all that much about music as some sacred artistic art form. They aren't really musicians themselves, they just want to play around a little after coming home from work. In that sense Suno really is not all that different from other consumer-oriented music software released over the last few decades, like Propellerheads Figure, which basically was just a bunch of loops you could turn off and on. And there's also nothing wrong with this. Everyone has different interests and priorities. I think people who care about making music "the old fashioned way" will not really feel affected by this and neither will people who like artists precisely for still making music the old fashioned way.