Prompt: I want you to make me a Jungle track with strong South African tribal elements and tribal chants, borrowing from South African genres like, House, Amapiano, and Qcom.
I feel that this one is closer to South African Gcom fused Jungle
Its prompt, simply: A Jungle track with South African tribal elements
Prompt: South African Jazz mixed with UK Garage
If you know of any real artists working in these cross section areas, or these remind you of, please link them
I’m a technocratic experimentalist, and AI tools are no taboo for me. I already experiment with Stable Diffusion (DrawThings + Automatic1111) on my MacBook, and would happily give your tools of choice a try myself @dnk8n. I enjoy listening almost everything electronic, preferably without vocals, from Deep House, over Progressive, Breaks and Techno, to DnB and Hardcore.
Hybrid workflows are already (somewhat) possible on Logic Pro, where you can add ‘intelligent’ percussion and similar. If it’s beneficial to overcome initial creative process blockades, I am all-in for that.
What I would love to see is AI that can produce the same level of output, not as an mp3, but as a DAW project.
The feature could also hold with it a memory of steps that can be edited. This way we know how we arrived from scratch to this point, and we have control over the elements.
I know this is not how the generative AI works, but if they could achieve that, I would be so keen to test out my ideas.
For someone like me, the learning curve is so steep, I just don’t have the time. This would dumb the early phase down for me so that I could work at a higher level. Great for hobbyists, not that relevant for professionals, but in the end the output comes from the same potentials of the DAW.
I am imagining this could already be done using code and supercollider
A man in the US put “hundreds of thousands” of AI generated songs online, then used automated bot accounts to stream them, generating over $10m in royalties.