Music created with AI still has a stigma among musicians: the musician didn't create it themselves; the machine rolled the dice, only certain patterns are repeated, and the individual instrumental tracks often sound like digital garbage and Ai will do my job one day.
In this Bulgarian project, the drummer seems somewhat limited to me, or the AI constantly repeats the same rolls and fills. I know this because I also play hybrid rock, where the skeleton of the song is made up of AI-generated music, and I play the guitars, bass, better keyboards, or strings.
The fundamental problem with AI is more the question "Who made it and how?" rather than "Do I like this music or not, and can I justify it?" Since reasoning has been lost in large parts of society, the creative process is criticized, and the lack of effort or emotion behind the music is criticized. What nonsense. Music is meant to evoke emotions, and if the harmonies in my hybrid rock, like in Monkey3's "Icarus," bring tears to my eyes, the music works. It touches me. I feel something, and I feel it somewhere I can't rationally control. The nearly 16-minute song "Road to Somewhere" also captivates the listener, and as a listener, you can only follow this exciting song and not fight the machine with both hands. It's a good, unpredictable song that manages to build 16 minutes of tension and never let you out.
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