You know that feeling when you come up with a melody, but forget it moments later? A classic trick is to record yourself humming the idea and build on the concept when you have time. But what if you could turn that poorly hummed melody into a realistic audio sample of a flute or violin performance? Tone Transfer is an online music app powered by machine learning and designed by Google’s Magenta Team. The app lets users upload audio of a single voice or instrument, then play it back through ...| AudioCipher
Meta's had a tough time getting people to buy into their VR Metaverse over the couple years, but all's not lost. The company has been making up for some of their missteps by offering free access to pre-trained models and open source artificial intelligence tools. Their move to introduce MusicGen in June 2023 was a direct challenge to Google's MusicLM team. Meta proved they could give users simple and controllable music generation based on any text description.During mid-March 2024, the music cop| AudioCipher
Historians will look back at 2023 as the year text-to-music software made its big debut. AudioCipher published version 3.0 of the text-to-MIDI VST in January, followed by AI services like MusicLM, MusicGen and Chirp in May, June and July. But what if a developer flipped the script and published an AI music-to-text application instead? AI music companies like Moises have explored this previously, but these were lyric-to-text transcription services, like karaoke or the closed captions that appear| AudioCipher
Over the past few months, we've been covering OpenAI applications like MuseNet and Jukebox. These are some of the most cutting edge AI music applications to date. But OpenAI wasn't the first company to venture into this space. Google started publishing generative music applications a few years earlier, under the name Magenta. The Magenta Team first presented the machine learning model at a Moogfest workshop in 2016. A year later, Google Brain researcher Douglas Eck gave the following talk on Ten| AudioCipher
Google unveiled new AI music, photo, and video generation tools at its annual I/O developer conference| Quartz
Generative AI music has evolved rapidly over the past two years. Following decades of research and development in academic circles, the general public is finally gaining access to consumer-friendly interfaces. Musicians are enjoying a renaissance of new plugins and DAW features powered by the same technology. The first wave of AI music creation in 2023 centered around text-to-music. That trend was followed by a second wave of apps like Suno and Udio, offering text-to-song. However, there's a sle| AudioCipher
Artificial intelligence is changing the way people create and listen to music. Anyone can boot up an AI song generator like Suno, Riffusion, VoiceMod and Udio to create original tracks in minutes. The broader category of text-to-music apps like our MIDI app AudioCipher have aimed to solve sample, chord and melody generation for music producers. They were built as creative inspiration tools that fit into your DAW workflow. AI text to song apps, on the other hand, seem to be driving toward the com| AudioCipher
Here are the best text-to-music apps in 2023| AudioCipher
Abstract| google-research.github.io