Fireside Chat: Music and AI, Part 5: Hungry Eyes on Charing Cross: AI Composition in Action

Fireside Chat: Music and AI, Part 5: Hungry Eyes on Charing Cross: AI Composition in Action

In this final episode of our music and AI series, you’ll witness the AI attempt to bring all our preparation together and generate the song “Hungry Eyes on Charing Cross!” We’ll put the AI music generator to the test, evaluating its ability to follow complex instructions and capture the essence of chamber choir music. Join us for a candid discussion about the results, the future of music in an AI-driven world, and the challenges and opportunities faced by musicians in this evolving landscape. Don’t miss this exciting culmination of our AI music journey!

Fireside Chat: Music and AI, Part 5: Hungry Eyes on Charing Cross: AI Composition in Action

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Machine-Generated Transcript

What follows is an AI-generated transcript. The transcript may contain errors and is not a substitute for watching the video.

Christopher S. Penn – 00:00
In this five-part series on music and AI, filmed at the 2024 Marketing AI Conference, or MACON in Cleveland, I sit down with composer Ruby King to discuss AI music and the future of creativity. This is part five, the fifth and final part of the song Hungry Eyes on Charing — AI composition in action. That is not at all a chamber —

Ruby King – 00:25
— see what it does in here. See if it changes to altos.

Christopher S. Penn – 00:41
Nope.

Ruby King – 00:45
Not different modes? No. That is a fail.

Christopher S. Penn – 00:49
Yes.

Ruby King – 00:49
If I submitted that, I would be — nope.

Christopher S. Penn – 00:53
Alright, let’s see what variation two of that particular one — who managed to nail it or not? Nope. Immediately.

Ruby King – 01:00
I mean, it’s epic, but it’s —

Christopher S. Penn – 01:02
— it’s epic, but that’s not a chamber —

Ruby King – 01:03
— this is a hungry cat in London. That’s a bit OTT, don’t you think? I mean, ignoring the instructions — soprano one and two, that’s —

Christopher S. Penn – 01:24
— yeah.

Ruby King – 01:25
— and with all the nice — so many times aren’t quite — women of their church, might be. Tenors — it’s hard. Okay. It’s got a separate line of harmony held with no words. Oh, that was interesting. Clipping. The last note of that is a weird one.

Christopher S. Penn – 03:22
Which line are we on? So it has mangled the lyrics. It is no longer following the lyrics.

Ruby King – 03:48
It did follow word painting of that bit. I’m not sure what it’s singing now. I’ve not — oh. Oh, there’s more.

Christopher S. Penn – 04:04
So it has gone back and repeated — is now repeating tenor one and two, which it shouldn’t be.

Ruby King – 04:11
No, it wants to.

Christopher S. Penn – 04:13
It wants to.

Ruby King – 04:13
Who are we to kill creativity?

Christopher S. Penn – 04:15
Let’s see what the second variation is. Any better?

Ruby King – 04:18
Okay.

Christopher S. Penn – 04:18
Nope.

Ruby King – 04:19
Nope. That’s a hard pass.

Christopher S. Penn – 04:22
So out of four variations, it didn’t even get the genre right for three of them.

Ruby King – 04:27
That’s a tricky thing. Also, it completely ignored when it was told brass and baby — pardon? Bass and soprano, and it had its own ideas.

Christopher S. Penn – 04:38
Yes. So obviously, it still has a bit of a ways to go, but that’s the process for building that. And with a tool like Suno, you have to do a bunch of candidates so that it eventually gets one of them right. But, to your point earlier, it’s — you would not have — you would not have paid a musician to make that song.

Ruby King – 05:02
People frequently do.

Christopher S. Penn – 05:03
Really?

Ruby King – 05:04
They do. Yeah. So there’s a lady who came to our university not too long ago. I first saw her because I went to a Royal Albert Hall performance in London, and that was sort of music for royal occasions because it was around the time of big royal occasions, and we thought it’d be great to hear that kind of thing in a big hall. Yeah, it was a lot of very famous music, Zadok the Priest, which is quite an important, famous one. So I went, and one of her pieces — one of the pieces there — was commissioned especially for the occasion. It had never been heard before, and it was the first time we heard it. And I got to meet the composer afterwards, very briefly. I think she signed something, and I ran away all giddy.

Ruby King – 05:51
Then she came to the university afterwards, and she recognized me. Yay. But she had been — I believe she’d been commissioned to write a piece for a chamber choir that was at a church because there are still — when you go to churches, especially in England — I cannot speak of America. I have been here for five minutes. I don’t know what’s going on. But in England, there are old-style churches that still have chamber choirs that still dress in the red and white, with the little frilly stuff — they’re cool, don’t dis it — and they still sing.

Ruby King – 06:26
There are still sometimes gender requirements for — not always, but sometimes there are still, I think — yeah, but they need music, and it’s fine singing the old stuff. But sometimes you want to commission a new piece for a special occasion. Maybe it’s the birthday — 500th birthday of something — and you want to have a special thing. They can be commissioned. They are commissioned, but it depends on what it’s for and how much money there is, whether they even hire you to sing it, let alone if you told this to write that for you. Can it give you the score, the sheet music, to give to your musicians? Because, at the moment, I think the answer is no to that.

Christopher S. Penn – 07:07
The answer is this tool cannot. You can use other tools to decompile it.

Ruby King – 07:11
Okay. I’m not sure how effective that would be, bearing in mind some of those notes were kind of — I know this is meant to be loud with a lot of notes, and there’s some notes in here — don’t listen to all of them.

Christopher S. Penn – 07:21
No, I meant it’s unlikely someone would write a — commission a song about a hungry cat just for fun.

Ruby King – 07:29
There have been stranger things.

Christopher S. Penn – 07:31
Fair enough. Okay. But yeah, that’s the process for how you would use generative AI. Today, it’s not something you can do all in one tool that’s going to be highly effective. It’s going to be something you have to do across multiple tools that will change over time, as well as the audio models themselves will get better over time. Thanks. So I guess that leaves us at the end of this to say, what do you think about the future of music, given what we worked on, what you know of the industry, and what you know of the way AI is going?

Ruby King – 08:06
I think it’s going to change. I know that a lot of people are concerned and hoping for the best that — I think it’s a tricky situation because a lot of it does come down to laws and people in other countries a long way away from most of the people I know in the industry and what they decide. It also depends a very large amount on the morals and ethics and beliefs and preferences of the people who have the money to usually commission that music. The music industry has already changed so much because of streaming. I mean, back in the day — a very, very long time ago — you would live in the residence of someone who would pay you to write the music. And then a patron. Yeah, exactly. It’s not like that anymore.

Ruby King – 09:02
Back in my day, not quite, but that was the way it was, and now that’s nearly unthinkable. I can’t think off the top of my head of anyone who’s in that particularly great situation. But streaming has changed it, and streaming pays so little that it’s a real problem, and it can’t continue forever. But where that line is — where it changes — is it going to change in favor of musicians and giving us a fair cut of what our work is worth, or is it going to change? “We didn’t need you anyway. AI will now be what we have, and we will invest all our money in improving AI rather than paying you enough money to incentivize you to write good music.” Because we’re not — musicians, composers have to do a lot of work to get our music — their music heard, and that will no longer be anything but a hobby if the money from Spotify and stuff is sent over to preference of AI and trying to get that to be the best that it can be so that more people go, “Okay, that was the old times. This is the new times. You have to be up and with it, with the new times. Goodbye humans, hello machines.”

It all does depend on so many different things. I think it’s impossible to say right now what is going to happen. Anyone who is predicting the future — which is a bad — don’t do that. Doesn’t work.

Christopher S. Penn – 10:31
I would agree, with the caveat that some — this is, as a psychology person — some human behaviors are very predictable. Greed and stupidity are highly predictable. People generally want better, faster, and cheaper. That’s highly predictable. People want to be entertained and engaged, and to some degree, educated. With that backdrop, given how the industry of music functions, it is highly probable that at least in the short term, there will be — music industries will see — music companies will say, “We can save a lot of money by not paying humans and generate music that people will find acceptable enough.”

Ruby King – 11:15
Which is why it also depends on laws and rules. I’m not sure what happened with — something that — there was such a lawsuit where Open — it was OpenAI — said, “We can’t do what we do without this content.” Are they being told they can’t?

Christopher S. Penn – 11:31
Well, those court cases are going to take years to work out, so it is unclear.

Ruby King – 11:37
Okay. Well, that could help musicians in the future. It could. And if that cloud is over the heads of tech companies, then investing every single penny into making it as great as possible might be slowed down because if it isn’t — if there’s a possibility that all that money is wasted — then greed dictates that money being wasted is bad.

Christopher S. Penn – 11:58
Right. So, for those independent companies, that’s true. What is probable is that it will hyper-concentrate into the tech companies that have the legal standing — Google and Meta — as the company’s, “Hey, you’re using Instagram and Facebook and YouTube. You gave us licenses. So here’s our models that are now the best-in-class models because we have the legal standing to say, ‘You told us we can make derivative work. So here’s your stuff.’”

Ruby King – 12:24
Yes. Yeah. Well, with greed, the music industry has got so much greed in it already. It’s infested. It’s really a difficult thing to get into, especially for minorities or anyone, but the usual, which I don’t have to explain. So it’s hard enough as it is, and then you add in all these other things, and it’s — things are only going to get worse. I would like to say until they get better, but I’m not sure you can predict that either.

Christopher S. Penn – 12:59
No, we cannot.

Ruby King – 13:00
No.

Christopher S. Penn – 13:01
No. Alright, well, thank you. I appreciate your time for this series. We’re going to publish this as a series because no one’s going to sit through 90 minutes of this. And thank you very much. Alright, we’re done. That concludes our series. I hope you found it helpful and useful, and we’d love your feedback about your thoughts on AI music, the ethics of using AI, and so on and so forth. You can leave a comment below, leave — send an email, drop a DM, whatever you can find. Ruby on LinkedIn — just look for “rubyking composer”. Thanks for tuning in! See you on the next one! If you enjoyed this video, please hit the like button.

Christopher S. Penn – 13:47
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Christopher S. Penn is one of the world’s leading experts on AI in marketing. Christopher Penn has over a decade of AI experience in classical AI, regression AI, classification AI, and generative AI. Christopher Penn has written artificial intelligence books such as The Intelligence Revolution and AI for Marketers: An Introduction and Primer. Christopher Penn is an AI keynote speaker around the world.



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