- Researchers at OpenAI are using machine learning to generate songs from scratch — complete with lyrics, soundtracks, and vocals.
- Jukebox harnesses the same technology that's behind deepfakes and this recently viral meme generator by training an AI based on music samples from Katy Perry, 2Pac, Elvis Presley, and dozens of artists across multiple genres.
- Surprisingly, some of the resulting songs are catchy and sound legitimate — check out some of the best ones we found.
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
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Artists may need to start competing with — or embracing — computer-made songs and soundtracks in the near future, if a new AI music generator shows any indication of what could come next for the music industry.
Researchers at artificial intelligence lab OpenAI have released Jukebox, an open-source algorithm that can generate music, complete with lyrics, vocals, and a soundtrack. All the algorithm needs is a genre, an artist, and a snippet of lyrics, and Jukebox can create song samples that can be realistic and quite catchy.
OpenAI's music generator runs on the same sort of machine-learning technology used to create deepfakes and employed by the slew of sites that popped up in 2019 generating fake memes, fake Airbnb listings, and fake cats. Jukebox produces its AI creations using artificial neural networks that train a computer to learn from an influx of data. In this case, researchers trained a neural network using 1.2 million samples of lyrics, soundtracks and tunes from dozens of artists.
Some of the results are surprisingly good. Jukebox pulls from songs across genres spanning pop, jazz, country, heavy metal, and hip-hop, and artists including Frank Sinatra, 2Pac, Katy Perry, Eagles, Beyoncé, and Kenny Rogers.
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Nonetheless, there are some limitations, as Jukebox's researchers acknowledge in a blog post on OpenAI's website.
"There is a significant gap between these generations and human-created music," OpenAI researchers write. "While the generated songs show local musical coherence, follow traditional chord patterns, and can even feature impressive solos, we do not hear familiar larger musical structures such as choruses that repeat."
The technology also raises some questions about potential legal issues. Jay-Z, for example, has recently been trying to get AI-powered impersonations of himself singing Billy Joel removed from YouTube. His entertainment company, Roc Nation, cites YouTube uploads for "unlawfully" using AI to "impersonate" Jay-Z's voice, according to The Verge.
Check out some of the best samples Jukebox was able to create, with some assistance from OpenAI researchers. You might notice some of the songs mirror lyrics you're already familiar with.
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