While I was reading this it made me think that the most significant difference between human made and AI made art is the experience of creation itself. An AI cannot understand or feel what goes into the making of a song or poem. Even another human who uses AI to make a song or poem won't have the same depth of experience as the person who actually went through the work and preparation to create it. It more has to do with what the art means to the artist instead of the person observing or consuming the art.
I disagree with the gentleman that said music died in 1979. I was a teenager in the late 70s and was very involved with all genres of music then. My favorite that came out of that was fusion jazz. I still follow Al Di Meola.
When you mention delirious, I was very encouraged. Amazing group and they led me into my relationship with Christ.
I worked with a guy that thought music died in 1970. Everything after it stunk. I couldn't figure that mentality out. Of course, I was 2-3 years old in 1970, so he basically said nearly everything that formed my musical tastes was terrible. Years before, I had decided I was not going to be a "stick in the mud" concerning music. One thing that helps is listening and learning to play new music, constantly feeding myself new things. Now at 57, I have resisted that pretty good.
And Pavarotti on Christmas Day.
Haha, actually that's still Nat King Cole!
We'll still need music even if the world doesn't. Keep going ;)
While I was reading this it made me think that the most significant difference between human made and AI made art is the experience of creation itself. An AI cannot understand or feel what goes into the making of a song or poem. Even another human who uses AI to make a song or poem won't have the same depth of experience as the person who actually went through the work and preparation to create it. It more has to do with what the art means to the artist instead of the person observing or consuming the art.
I disagree with the gentleman that said music died in 1979. I was a teenager in the late 70s and was very involved with all genres of music then. My favorite that came out of that was fusion jazz. I still follow Al Di Meola.
When you mention delirious, I was very encouraged. Amazing group and they led me into my relationship with Christ.
I worked with a guy that thought music died in 1970. Everything after it stunk. I couldn't figure that mentality out. Of course, I was 2-3 years old in 1970, so he basically said nearly everything that formed my musical tastes was terrible. Years before, I had decided I was not going to be a "stick in the mud" concerning music. One thing that helps is listening and learning to play new music, constantly feeding myself new things. Now at 57, I have resisted that pretty good.