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Can Some AI-Generated Songs Actually Be Worth Listening To?

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The author discusses a viral 'Afro Soul' cover of Stromae's 'Papaoutai,' initially believed to be by a human artist, but later revealed to be AI-generated. This prompts a reflection on the quality and potential of AI music.

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有些AI生成的歌曲真的值得一聽嗎?

Hacker News
大約 1 個月前

AI 生成摘要

作者探討了一首爆紅的Stromae歌曲'Papaoutai'的'Afro Soul'翻唱版本,最初被認為是人類藝術家所作,但後來證實是AI生成。這引發了對AI音樂品質和潛力的反思。

Some AI Songs Might Actually Be Worth Listening To? | Ritchie Mwewa

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Ritchie Mwewa

Bipedal Software Engineer from the Milky Way

Some AI Songs Might Actually Be Worth Listening To?

So, there’s this ‘Afro Soul’ cover of Stromae’s “Papaoutai” that has been everywhere lately. The internet has once again done what it does best: make things go viral, and it made this song viral until it eventually found its way to my part of the internet.

I listened to the song and… it’s good?. REALLY GOOD. The choral and Afro touches, as well as the flow. It takes Stromae’s original and flips it into something that feels completely fresh. I had it on repeat.

For the record:

My understanding of French is on the Beginner level. My mentee teaches me French, as he is a native speaker. I can pronounce certain words with some accuracy, and I can do a short conversation, and that’s it. But I love French Music! My top French artists so far are Stromae, Barbara Pravi, and MPL. Then it gets random from there.

Naturally, I wanted a proper copy for my Hard Drive. So I headed over to my usual trusted source (you know the kind) to grab a FLAC. But I couldn’t find it!
So I did what I’m never proud of doing, I opened DuckDuckGo and typed “Papaoutai Afro Soul download” (like some kind of amateur).
That’s when things got weird. Instead of download links from shady websites that probably host malware, I found articles and videos talking about how this track is AI-generated. The vocals, the arrangement, all of it.

Meanwhile, the video I’d seen on YouTube featured a Congolese performing artist, and singer named Arsene Mukendi performing the song with so much emotion, soul, and conviction that I was sure he was the artist behind it.

I got curious, and after some not-so-thorough OSINT, I found the confirmation I needed: an Instagram post by Arsene that talks about his performance of the song

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Huh? I’m not gonna lie, I felt conflicted. Using AI tools to code is fine, but AI music? That’s new territory. I don’t consider myself as someone that would listen to AI-generated music, mostly because a fair number of AI music I’ve seen is simply terrible. Yet, I’ve been listening to this song on repeat and actually enjoying it.
I’d already added it to my rotation before I knew any of this. I’d already decided it was a banger.

So now I’m sitting here wondering, does it matter anymore? The song still sounds great. Arsene’s performance is still electric. The fact that it’s AI-generated hasn’t changed the way I feel about it.
But it also raises a question: was this the bad kind of viral? The kind where people feel tricked once they find out the truth? Or is it something else: proof that AI can actually produce something worth listening to (in-terms of music), and that a great performer can make it feel even more human anyway?

I see AI coding agents as tools that help me get things done quickly, something that would take me a whole day to finish on my own, could take a few minutes with a coding agent. Should that same principle apply to AI-generated music or movies?

I’m not yet sure where I land on that. But I know three things:

I can’t confidently say that I’ll be listening to AI-generated music, as most of it is rubbish, but this song sounds good and I don’t think I’ll change my mind on it any time soon.

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Ritchie Mwewa.
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