AI in Music: Whose Voice Is It Anyway?

AI in Music: Whose Voice Is It Anyway?

Up next

From Doer to Director: The LinkedIn Playbook for the AI Age

A billion professionals. Eighteen years of data. And a skills gap that's widening as AI tools multiply. Mohak Shroff has watched LinkedIn evolve from a professional network into what he calls, at its core, an AI matching engine. That vantage point gives Shroff, SVP Engineering at ...  Show more

Semaglutide Goes Generic: Big Pharma’s Moat Breaks

India's semaglutide moment has arrived. As Novo Nordisk's patent expires on March 20th, over fifty generic brands are poised to flood the market potentially slashing monthly costs from ₹10,000 to ₹3,500. But this is no ordinary generic wave. Semaglutide is a complex peptide, cold ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

The Year AI Broke Into Music
Big Take

2024 was the year AI broke into the music industry. Record labels that had fought AI-generated songs at every turn started to consider how they might want to use AI tools. But as the technology creeps into more parts of the music production process, not everyone agrees on where t ...  Show more

How AI and Algorithms Are Transforming Music
On the Media

It’s been almost a year since the historic music outlet Pitchfork shrank considerably. On this week’s On the Media, why the distinctive voices in music journalism are worth saving. Plus, how AI music generators could upend the industry. 

[01:00]  Host Micah Loewinger, sp ...

  Show more

FIRST MOVER: Avenged Sevenfold Lead Vocalist on Why Artists Should 'Never' Sign With a Major Label
CoinDesk Podcast Network

Avenged Sevenfold lead vocalist Matt Sanders discusses how Web3 technologies can change the music industry. To get the show every day, follow the podcast here. Avenged Sevenfold lead vocalist Matt Sanders joins "First Mover" to discuss the band's new season pass and how NFTs and ...  Show more

How AI Could Change the Future of Music
Plain English with Derek Thompson

Artificial intelligence tools for musicians are getting eerily good, very fast. Their work can be maddening, funny, ethically dubious, and downright fascinating all at the same time. TV and podcast composer Mark Henry Phillips joins to describe his experience working with them. W ...  Show more