Current:Home > MarketsGoogle's latest AI music tool creates tracks using famous singers' voice clones -Triumph Financial Guides
Google's latest AI music tool creates tracks using famous singers' voice clones
View
Date:2025-04-18 06:14:42
Google has revealed an experimental AI tool, Dream Track, that creates original songs in the style of selected famous singers. It is among several new developments announced Thursday by the tech giant at the intersection of music and AI.
In a demo of Dream Track, a user simply types in a prompt — in this case, "a ballad about how opposites attract, upbeat acoustic" — and the system spits out this short clip of a new song, sung by pop star Charlie Puth's voice clone with a stylistically relevant backing track.
Eight other artists including Alec Benjamin, Charli XCX, Demi Lovato, John Legend, Papoose, Sia, T-Pain, and Troye Sivan signed on to participate in Google's project. In another demo video, the typed prompt "A sunny morning in Florida, R&B" yields a song performed in suitably auto-tuned fashion by a synthesized T-Pain.
The company is piloting Dream Track (which can currently only be used in YouTube Shorts, YouTube's short-form video offering) in tandem with other AI music tools that do things like auto-generate horn sections and even entire orchestras from text prompts and humming. Google issued a series of videos demonstrating these tools, which are being developed with the Google subsidiary DeepMind using the AI music generation model Lyria. One demo transforms a simple solo a cappella vocal line into music played by a synthesized string orchestra:
In an email to NPR, Google said these tools are currently in a pilot phase. They have not been released to the public yet, but instead are being tested by roughly 100 U.S.-based participating content creators already within Google's orbit.
Google shared enthusiastic quotes from several participating pop stars.
"Being a part of YouTube's Dream Track experiment is an opportunity to help shape possibilities for the future," said John Legend. "As an artist, I am happy to have a seat at the table and I look forward to seeing what the creators dream up during this period."
But some artists working outside of Google's orbit are skeptical about these new developments.
"I'm grateful that this new development involves the artists, presumably meaning they are being compensated for what they are contributing to this," said singer-songwriter and voice actor Dan Navarro. "But the commoditization of music, like so much toothpaste from a tube, leads me to wonder, where is the inspiration? I suspect, not present at all."
The advances come as Google and other tech companies try to strike a balance between innovation and protecting artists' intellectual property.
It was only last April that music fans responded with disbelief to the release on streaming and social media platforms of the viral song "Heart on My Sleeve" — a song that used AI to simulate the vocal stylings of hip-hop stars Drake and The Weeknd without the artists' permission — and in so doing launched a media frenzy.
At that point, Drake and The Weeknd's label owner Universal Music Group (UMG) invoked copyright violation to get the platforms to take "Heart on My Sleeve" down.
But now the music label is partnering with Google to license the voices of their artists for Dream Track.
"We have a fundamental responsibility to our artists to ensure the digital ecosystem evolves to protect them and their work against unauthorized exploitation, including by generative AI platforms," said UMG chairman and CEO Sir Lucian Grainge in a statement to NPR. "At the same time, we must help artists achieve their greatest creative and commercial potential – in part by providing them access to the kind of opportunities and cutting-edge creative tools made possible by AI."
Google said it has agreements in place with all nine participating singers for the Dream Track experiment and is working with UMG and other music industry partners to monetize the technology. It recently issued guidelines for these collaborations, and said it will identify AI-generated content using watermarking technologies, so users know whether they are consuming real or AI-generated content.
"This will obviously become more widespread," said entertainment business lawyer Schuyler Moore, a partner at the Los Angeles-based law firm Greenberg Glusker.
Moore said he expects licensing deals between tech and entertainment companies around compensating AI spin-offs to become standard in the near future, especially given the fact right of publicity laws vary widely from state to state, and federal legislation is still only in the very early stages of being developed.
"Whoever gets paid for [their voice clone] will be happy because they'll be able to sit at home and not have to go to a recording session. And other people will go have fun making whatever they want using those clones," he said.
veryGood! (82)
Related
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Taylor Swift is related to another tortured poet: See the family tree
- New satellite will 'name and shame' large-scale polluters, by tracking methane gas emissions
- 16 and Pregnant Star Sean Garinger Dead at 20 After ATV Accident
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- What is debt? Get to know the common types of loans, credit
- EAGLEEYE COIN: Cryptocurrency payments, a new trend in the digital economy
- Nab $140 Worth of Isle of Paradise Tanning Butter for $49 and Get Your Glow On
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Kacey Musgraves calls out her 'SNL' wardrobe blunder: 'I forget to remove the clip'
Ranking
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- EAGLEEYE COIN: Cryptocurrencies Walk Through Darkest Hour
- Court rules Florida’s “stop woke” law restricting business diversity training is unconstitutional
- Credit card late fees to be capped at $8 under Biden campaign against junk fees
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- TLC's Chilli is officially a grandmother to a baby girl
- EAGLEEYE COIN: Total Stablecoin Supply Hits $180 Billion
- As threat to IVF looms in Alabama, patients over 35 or with serious diseases worry for their futures
Recommendation
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
EAGLEEYE COIN: Artificial Intelligence Meets Cryptocurrency
It's NFL franchise tag deadline day. What does it mean, top candidates and more
GM recalls nearly 820,000 pickup trucks over latch safety issue
See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
A combination Applebee’s-IHOP? Parent company wants to bring dual-brand restaurants to the US
EAGLEEYE COIN: Cryptocurrencies Walk Through Darkest Hour
JetBlue scraps $3.8 billion deal to buy Spirit Airlines