Suno is nice, but it can’t yet generate full-length songs. Meet Udio. It’s the first AI music app capable of generating high quality, full-length songs in less than 40 seconds from just a text prompt.
Engineer Fabricio H. Franzoli of Franzoli Electronics used four tesla coils to play an interesting cover of Michael Jackson’s Billie Jean. These musical tesla coils basically produce sound by switching on / off a certain number of times per second, thus causing air molecules around it to heat up and vibrate.
Spotify AI Playlist Beta requires just a text prompt to generate a list of songs that fit your mood exactly. Available now in the UK and Australia to Spotify Premium users on iOS / Android, AI Playlist even accepts text prompts that reference places, animals, activities, movie characters, colors, a well as emojis.
Worldweight by August Kamp is unofficially the first music video made with OpenAI’s yet to be released Sora text-to-video generator. The artist felt like this piece of art was their absolute heart and soul, especially after remembering the notes tumbled through her hands and onto the keys of a synthesizer almost two years ago.
You’ve seen Xiaomi’s CyberOne drumming, now here’s the Fourier GR-1 humanoid robot putting on its own drumming performance. This is possible thanks to its bionic torso and human-like motion control capabilities, complete with up to 54 DoFs and a peak joint torque of 230N.m.
There’s Google’s MusicLM, and then Suno AI v3, which can generate full, two-minute songs in seconds using just basic text prompts. If this sounds impressive, the team has much more in the works, including better audio quality, more styles / genres, and improved prompt adherence.
What could be cooler than a Windows 98 smartwatch? A portable Winamp player of course. Called Raspinamp, AudioWanderer’s creation features a Raspberry Pi 3B board and a 3.5″ TFT touchscreen display, all placed within a clear acrylic enclosure.
Adobe’s new Project Music GenAI Control tool uses generative AI to turn text prompts into music, complete with fine-grained control for users to edit that audio for their precise needs. For example, users can enter prompts like “punk rock,” “happy jazz,” or “summer mood” to generate music.
Nintendo Live 2024 Tokyo was supposed to include a performance by The Legend of Zelda Orchestra, but the company had to cancel the event over safety fears. So, they pre-recorded the event and shared the full 29-minute concert online.