Musicians and producers can already utilize AI to realistically reproduce the sound of any instrument or voice imaginable.
Paul Campbell/iStock via Getty Images
AI can streamline the painstaking work of mixing and editing tracks. But it’s also easy to see how AI-generated music will make more money for giant streaming services at the expense of artists.
Neil Rusch, University of the Witwatersrand dan Sarah Wurz, University of the Witwatersrand
Sometimes archaeologists can “hear” the ancient past using acoustic methods.
Blob Opera, developed by Google and AI artist David Li, lets students manipulate a soprano, alto, tenor and bass quartet of blobs.
(YoutTube/Google Arts & Culture)
From incorporating video-based performances to learning new composition apps, teaching students virtually has forced music educators to learn and share new ways to reach students.
The two violins constructed by the researchers.
Courtesy Martina Meincken
More than 20,000 American high school students have made their own guitars in school over the past decade. Many of them have wound up more into learning about STEM disciplines.
What can teachers and parents do to ensure that children select musical activities based on their real desires?
(Shutterstock)
When children take up instruments they’re not passionate about, most don’t stick with music for long, and that’s a shame.
Montreal-born pianist Oscar Peterson waves after playing at the Montreal Forum in July 1984. The Coalition for Music Education is inviting schools and communities across Canada to sing “Hymn To Freedom,” written by Peterson and Harriette Hamilton, on Music Monday 2019, a day to celebrate music.
(CP/Jean F. Leblanc)