Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

andym

(6,070 posts)
Sat May 30, 2026, 12:50 PM 9 hrs ago

AI helped a musician with Parkinson's finish his new album when he could no longer play guitar

AI helped a musician with Parkinson’s finish his new album when he could no longer play guitar
By MUSTAKIM HASNATH
Updated 5:26 AM PDT, May 30, 2026
https://apnews.com/article/ai-song-generator-musician-parkinsons-ac2a6ed263256c12f68eb827f7e8238a

Samuel Smith spent years writing songs with a guitar in his hands.
Now, the London-based singer-songwriter is using artificial intelligence tools to help him continue making Americana music after Parkinson’s disease largely took away his ability to play guitar.

Smith, who was diagnosed with the progressive neurological disorder in 2020, recently released his second album, “The Art of Letting Go.” For one of the eight tracks, an instrumental piece titled “Horizon,” he relied on platforms that use AI to generate music to create demo arrangements that would convey his vision to the musicians who recorded the song.

--snip--
Generative AI has divided the music industry, whose artists and record labels have complained of their copyrighted work being used to train the models behind AI-powered music tools. Sony Music Entertainment, Universal Music Group and Warner Records sued Suno and Udio in June 2024, although Universal later reached a settlement and partnership deal with Udio and Warner did the same with Suno.

Less discussed is what those platforms can do when employed by a serious musician like Smith, whose disease affects the tools central to his songwriting and identity as a guitarist: his hands. He released his debut album, “In the Springtime,” in 2023, saying he wanted to give his two sons a way to remember when he could perform and record music himself.

---snip--
more at the link

The key quote from Smith is this:
“AI is not replacing anything for me, it’s unlocking, it’s enabling. It’s allowing me to keep writing. I upload my lyrics; AI doesn’t create my lyrics. I upload my music; AI does not create my music.”

------------------------
Here is a counterpoint to the AI as a malevolent force theme. The key point is that the artist is in control and is using the AI to complement his physical capabilities as opposed to just creating random new music.

15 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
AI helped a musician with Parkinson's finish his new album when he could no longer play guitar (Original Post) andym 9 hrs ago OP
Great story. 👍 Dave Bowman 9 hrs ago #1
Great article. gulliver 9 hrs ago #2
Uhhhhh.... GenThePerservering 9 hrs ago #3
Uhhhh? gulliver 9 hrs ago #5
His music must be pretty shit and generic SamuelTheThird 9 hrs ago #4
AI certainly makes it easy to generate crap; however, unblock 8 hrs ago #7
Real composers can compose without playing an instrument SamuelTheThird 8 hrs ago #11
i suppose real musicians have perfect pitch and don't need a device to perfectly tune their guitars? unblock 7 hrs ago #13
It's AI feel good propaganda SamuelTheThird 7 hrs ago #14
I find AI highly problematic for a number of reasons, but unblock 4 hrs ago #15
Closed mind, much? Ms. Toad 8 hrs ago #8
Yes, I read the article SamuelTheThird 8 hrs ago #10
I understand that you saw the acronym AI and reacted. Ms. Toad 7 hrs ago #12
The article says he is using them to put together a demo and then he pays actual musicians to record it for real. FascismIsDeath 8 hrs ago #9
Excellent! 👍 anciano 8 hrs ago #6

SamuelTheThird

(1,298 posts)
4. His music must be pretty shit and generic
Sat May 30, 2026, 01:01 PM
9 hrs ago

If he's using AI to create arrangements that approximate what is in his head.

unblock

(56,285 posts)
7. AI certainly makes it easy to generate crap; however,
Sat May 30, 2026, 01:29 PM
8 hrs ago

it's a tool, and there's plenty of technology (AI and otherwise) both in the music industry and elsewhere that can be used either well or poorly.

If a musician prompts "take these lyrics and generate a song in my style based on these previously uploaded songs" then sure, it will be a crap generic imitation of his style.

But if he supplies the tempo, key signature, chord progression, basic melodies for chorus and verse, more details about the style, etc.,

AND then critically listens to the output and keep iterating fixes -- "in measure 37 accent the 3rd beat a little more" -- and so on until it very closely matches what's in his head, then AI becomes a useful tool.

The key to AI is realizing that the QA and fine-tuning part that's really important. The first draft it spits out is usually crap.

Unfortunately, most people don't get past the first draft and try to pass it off as a finished product.

SamuelTheThird

(1,298 posts)
11. Real composers can compose without playing an instrument
Sat May 30, 2026, 02:00 PM
8 hrs ago

They don't need AI to create music, which is what he's doing. He's supplying a melody and having AI fill the rest in. Sorry, whether you do that once or keep refining it, that isn't impressive to me.

unblock

(56,285 posts)
13. i suppose real musicians have perfect pitch and don't need a device to perfectly tune their guitars?
Sat May 30, 2026, 02:38 PM
7 hrs ago

and real musicians never use autotune so to hell with cher and many others, right?

and real musicians never use drum machines, so phil collins is just a hack drummer, right?


it's a tool, and from hammers to AI, tools are good, bad, or ugly depending on how you use them.

if he came up with an original melody, he's a real musician before he even uploaded that melody to an AI song generator.

as i noted, if he just accepted the first draft of an arrangement, then he's being lazy and not putting any musical input into that part of the final song. however, to whatever extent he tweaks and edits and rejects what sounds bad and keeps at it until it sounds good, then that's injecting musical talent into the process.

SamuelTheThird

(1,298 posts)
14. It's AI feel good propaganda
Sat May 30, 2026, 02:54 PM
7 hrs ago

and people are falling for it. Seeing the gutting of the arts fields by AI slop, I am not going along with the cheerleading.

unblock

(56,285 posts)
15. I find AI highly problematic for a number of reasons, but
Sat May 30, 2026, 05:53 PM
4 hrs ago

I'm not willing to say it's unambiguously evil without any redeeming qualities.

Even if 98% of current usage is crap, 2% might still be beneficial.

I'll grant AI proponents a few stories like this one though I won't accept any arguments about that being the majority or anything close to it.

Ms. Toad

(38,857 posts)
8. Closed mind, much?
Sat May 30, 2026, 01:29 PM
8 hrs ago

Did you read the article to find out how he uses AI to compose?
Did you bother to listen to any of his music - before, and after, his Parkinson's diagnosis when a medical condition robbed him of his ability to write music in the way he traditionally has (by playing it on his guitar as he writes)?
Has his music essentially changed since he has replaced physically playing his guitar with using AI to serve the same purpose?

Or are you simply assuming that since he uses AI as a tool to get around the reality that he can no longer physically use his guitar as a composing tool that what he now produces is somehow crap because he has found a replacement tool that allows him to continue composing music.

SamuelTheThird

(1,298 posts)
10. Yes, I read the article
Sat May 30, 2026, 01:57 PM
8 hrs ago

Which is why I was specific in what I said. If you didn't understand what I typed that isn't my problem.

Ms. Toad

(38,857 posts)
12. I understand that you saw the acronym AI and reacted.
Sat May 30, 2026, 02:14 PM
7 hrs ago

I'm encouraging you to open your mind to the possibility that people who have artistic abilities - which they cannot physically implement - might be one of the extremely positive uses of AI.

You might want to at least listen to his before music, and his after music, before you assume that using AI as a tool makes it "shit and generic."

FascismIsDeath

(275 posts)
9. The article says he is using them to put together a demo and then he pays actual musicians to record it for real.
Sat May 30, 2026, 01:47 PM
8 hrs ago
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»AI helped a musician with...