Suno's Wiki says that the music created on their site is copyright free and doesn't use any intellectual property from artists... Do you think that's true? What's your opinion?
I think in some companies is true. I was hired by one of them so create 500 loops and also 20 ambient tracks for their program to learn from. I had to sign a contract and all. It is a weird world lol
Ai music can not be copyrighted by anyone. It also means no one can receive royalties on music that is ai created. Other people can take the music that you created using ai and do what they like with it. ❤ 😊
Nice!! Love to see how you process the samples. Ive found the RipX DAW to be the best for stem seperation, gives you a lot of control especially when separating tracks that are within a similar frequency band, but lalal is really convenient (especially with the desktop app)
What’s wrong with using AI? I used it for sound design. I wanted a machine noise I could layer with my clap, specifically a rotary sound kind of like a rotary phone sound but I couldn’t find it on splice. It generated 5 sounds instantly which saved me immense time searching online for the sounds.
Do you have any tips on getting a drum loop to work? Ive noticed that with Suno everything seems to be centered. If i want to use a drum loop but pan some aspects of it, like hats per se, what do you think would be an efficient, easy way to do it?
That's a great question. I just had a play around with various language and prompts and, I just don't think it's there yet with specific values. "Percussion panned left" or "Hi Hats 45 degrees left, cymbals 50 degrees right" No matter what I've tried so far, it gets confused taking that prompt out of context and changes the genre or just ignores it all together keeping everything central. It's a great point, I'm sure my answer will change in a month or two but for now, I think the technology is focused just on perfecting the genre and quality of the song it produces rather than panning or EQ adjustments etc.
@@WillHattonI see about 10 links but none of them is about the wiki that will help me make a prompt similar to an artist could you leave the link in the comments 🥰
Suno's Wiki says that the music created on their site is copyright free and doesn't use any intellectual property from artists... Do you think that's true? What's your opinion?
lol... XD
I think in some companies is true. I was hired by one of them so create 500 loops and also 20 ambient tracks for their program to learn from. I had to sign a contract and all. It is a weird world lol
Ai music can not be copyrighted by anyone. It also means no one can receive royalties on music that is ai created. Other people can take the music that you created using ai and do what they like with it. ❤ 😊
Nice!! Love to see how you process the samples.
Ive found the RipX DAW to be the best for stem seperation, gives you a lot of control especially when separating tracks that are within a similar frequency band, but lalal is really convenient (especially with the desktop app)
@@francisjohnluke will have to revisit Rip X, I didn’t have much luck when I tried on the max beginning of the year!
What’s wrong with using AI? I used it for sound design. I wanted a machine noise I could layer with my clap, specifically a rotary sound kind of like a rotary phone sound but I couldn’t find it on splice. It generated 5 sounds instantly which saved me immense time searching online for the sounds.
@@HypeBeast764 good idea!
Interesting. What do you use for that?
I agree, after using both quite a bit, I prefer Suno's output. I am not sure why people think Udio is better, maybe it's better at other genres.
very insightful! its both scary and cool how advanced ai as gotten regarding music
@@kimiuk agreed! Scary and cool is the descriptor for sure
Do you have any tips on getting a drum loop to work? Ive noticed that with Suno everything seems to be centered. If i want to use a drum loop but pan some aspects of it, like hats per se, what do you think would be an efficient, easy way to do it?
That's a great question.
I just had a play around with various language and prompts and, I just don't think it's there yet with specific values. "Percussion panned left" or "Hi Hats 45 degrees left, cymbals 50 degrees right"
No matter what I've tried so far, it gets confused taking that prompt out of context and changes the genre or just ignores it all together keeping everything central. It's a great point, I'm sure my answer will change in a month or two but for now, I think the technology is focused just on perfecting the genre and quality of the song it produces rather than panning or EQ adjustments etc.
Where is the wiki link?
In the description, below the time stamps :)
@@WillHattonI see about 10 links but none of them is about the wiki that will help me make a prompt similar to an artist could you leave the link in the comments 🥰
@@Rasik-online
Wiki
www.suno.wiki/
Big List of Prompts
travisnicholson.medium.com/complete-list-of-prompts-styles-for-suno-ai-music-2024-33ecee85f180
@@WillHatton thank you
People complained about sampling. This can mean those people will have less to complain about. No more need to sample copywritten music.
We're all about providing solutions!