After all these creepy years of trying to compose Industrial music, and my conservatory of music not willing me to join back as pianist. I naturally turned myself to AI, but not for the fun, for serious purpose: hitting the gym!
Here is my “Gym Compendium Vol. 1”:
Volume 2 released normally tomorrow around 10pm UTC+2
I’m not sure how I feel about the AI-generated tracks idea, but I’ve been cooking up 30-minute playlists with weird themes for workouts, myself; everything from gloomy dark shit to loud and abrasive, depending on the workout, and lots of industrial ones for some odd reason. You posted this in Member Releases, so I won’t add any here, but you gave me a good idea for the future
Do you dig listening to these more than regular music?
My goal is positive vibes/attitude/support mood. I quited supporting and listening to Industrial, I still do like the idea of Industrial Techno (it’s one of my 150 prompts keywords to create what I did) but the big names who plays vampires or goths, or too hardcore/negative energy (like Suicide Commando), I avoid, naturally, being subgenres of Industrial.
I enjoy it yeah, as long as it’s agaisnt none-sense useless satanic violence.
I made a poll about AI and it’s history, aswell as my personnal decision to end up using AI. If you would like to take a look and maybe vote/comment/drop a like:
Just, don’t do just a copy/pasta. This is MY AI works, copyrighted by the label The state51 Conspiracy. If you want to avoid copyrights strikes. So you should know.
I don’t think you can do that anymore, but I’d certainly do it the Weird Al (not AI, lol) way: getting the artist’s permission first is always the best way to keep it friendly between musicians. And if that fails, you can always just borrow concepts or find inspiration in unique places
Of course copyrights exist still (I’m an official artist bro, signed a contract with a label in 2024), just check one of my song on YouTube, it says clearly “Provided to YouTube by The state51 Conspiracy”. I’m a YouTube approved artist (check the lil note next to my artist name). You may have my permission, and it’s cool, to reproduce similar work in your studio: Just don’t copy paste my work, but rather get inspired by it and by your usual listenings. What can I say to not seem mean? lol
This certainly depends on where you live, and you might be correct as far as your country goes, but at least in the US, you can’t copyright AI works.
The good news? I think I wouldn’t be able to copyright an AI-derivative work, either, but that’s an interesting conversation, too. I don’t know if anyone has ever tried to cover a song created with AI and tried that one yet, lol, but that would also be funny to see happen in the upcoming years.