We Are The Robots: Is the future of music artificial?
Last year computer scientists unveiled the first song to be composed by artificial intelligence, the Beatles-esque ditty'Daddy's Car'. But it's not the first sign of AI infiltrating music-making – from self-generating soundtracks to unique albums created on demand, the robots are on the march. Jack Needham asks if we're ready for the AI revolution to reach our ears. When we think of the early relationship between humans, machines and music, we might think of Kraftwerk's analog pop or Delia Derbyshire's Radiophonic soundscapes – yet our fascination with machine music goes back much further than that. Late last year, University of Canterbury professor Jack Copeland and composer Jason Long restored the first piece of recorded machine music created in 1951 by Alan Turing, the British mathematician and artificial intelligence pioneer. The single-sided 12" acetate disc captures three melodies played by a primitive computer that filled most of the ground floor of Turing's laboratory.
Feb-19-2017, 18:05:10 GMT
- Country:
- North America > United States > California > Alameda County > Oakland (0.05)
- Industry:
- Media > Music (1.00)
- Leisure & Entertainment (1.00)
- Technology: