PennyThompson
Orgasm Fairy
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2024
- Posts
- 1,380
This is the most "no facts, only vibes" post I've seen on here in a while, and that title doesn't lack for competition
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I can't even find an emoji that expresses my feelings about this post. R.i.p. emojisThis is the most "no facts, only vibes" post I've seen on here in a while, and that title doesn't lack for competition![]()
Emojis are being killed by AI??I can't even find an emoji that expresses my feelings about this post. R.i.p. emojis![]()
First, none of the Beatles holds a college degree that isn't honorary. Roger Daltrey has an honorary degree, but not an earned by-the-books degree. Then you have The Monkees, and yes, they were talented. Davy Jones had a law degree, and Peter Tork attended Carleton College but did not graduate. The other two members, Micky Dolenz and Michael Nesmith, do not have a college degree. In fact, some of the most talented musicians have never attended higher education schools.a degree in music is worthless. Humans can not compete with A.I. in terms of songwriting & arrangement
Sadly, Spotify is pushing AI and other unsavory things into their ecosystem so it's becoming as enshittified as some of the other "mainstream" services nowadays. Before I stopped using it this year, the degraded quality of the Wrapped feature was quite notable, the algorithm suggesting new music based on my tastes was awful and the number of AI "musicians" and musicians who use AI for promotion/marketing was increasing. Really sad.Spotify is the largest music platform, still turning unknowns into stars, as we speak.
Well, Epiphone is owned by Gibson, while Fender owns Jackson. Washburn, is dead if you ask mePRS, Yamaha, Taylor, epiphone, Ibanez, Jackson, Gretsch, Schechter, Ernie Ball, Warwick, Washburn...
I can keep going, if you want?
It will be interesting. Can A.I. perform via holograms (in the future, when that technology is perfected? )Teenagers write songs in their bedrooms and become millionaires these days. Cough, Billie Eillish.
AI can write and arrange songs, by stealing ideas it's heard from humans, but it can't perform live.
That will never change.
I haven't been on it in a couple years, sad to hear it's going that way.Sadly, Spotify is pushing AI and other unsavory things into their ecosystem so it's becoming as enshittified as some of the other "mainstream" services nowadays. Before I stopped using it this year, the degraded quality of the Wrapped feature was quite notable, the algorithm suggesting new music based on my tastes was awful and the number of AI "musicians" and musicians who use AI for promotion/marketing was increasing. Really sad.
There's hologram concerts now. But somehow, live human shows keep selling out.It will be interesting. Can A.I. perform via holograms (in the future, when that technology is perfected? )
I get where you're coming from, truly I do.Well, Epiphone is owned by Gibson, while Fender owns Jackson. Washburn, is dead if you ask me
Imagine going to music school to learn how to succeed at POP music.First, none of the Beatles holds a college degree that isn't honorary. Roger Daltrey has an honorary degree, but not an earned by-the-books degree. Then you have The Monkees, and yes, they were talented. Davy Jones had a law degree, and Peter Tork attended Carleton College but did not graduate. The other two members, Micky Dolenz and Michael Nesmith, do not have a college degree. In fact, some of the most talented musicians have never attended higher education schools.
Imagine going to music school to learn how to succeed at POP music.
Honestly, it kind of matches my experience as a professional chef. Cooks who learned on the job outperform cooks who went to cooking school first by any metric of performance you can name.
Sure, those people went on to more lucrative careers as hospitality executives, but you wouldn't want them on the line on a Friday night. Or, really, any night.
A large number of touring musicians started as stage hands and techs, who were also good players and got the spot in the band when it opened up. Zach Meyers, guitarist for Shinedown, for example.My husband is a banquet chef. He never hires cooks. He hires dishwashers. When he has an opening for a cook, he promotes the dishwasher who is the best worker. He trains them to do things the way he wants them done, not how they learned from some other chef.
Imagine going to music school to learn how to succeed at POP music.
I’m not going to get into a “no true Scotsman” situation about this, and I’m not going to deny that the music industry is full of professionals.Sorry. There are music schools with programs in commercial music, and like it or not, they are the meat and potatoes of pop groups. Yes, the true talent is in front with a microphone, but in a studio and on stage in background, training is paramount.
Berklee is the most notable.
There are actually a lot of Berklee and MIT graduates that make it big, partly because of the skills they developed there.I’m not going to get into a “no true Scotsman” situation about this, and I’m not going to deny that the music industry is full of professionals.
But I feel like other people know what I mean, whether you yourself do or not.
Nobody who’s a headlining frontperson or a popstar got those positions because they graduated Berklee.
Brian May of Queen has a Ph. D.First, none of the Beatles holds a college degree that isn't honorary. Roger Daltrey has an honorary degree, but not an earned by-the-books degree. Then you have The Monkees, and yes, they were talented. Davy Jones had a law degree, and Peter Tork attended Carleton College but did not graduate. The other two members, Micky Dolenz and Michael Nesmith, do not have a college degree. In fact, some of the most talented musicians have never attended higher education schools.
Billie Eillish is old! she's been at it for what, ten years?Teenagers write songs in their bedrooms and become millionaires these days. Cough, Billie Eillish.
AI can write and arrange songs, by stealing ideas it's heard from humans, but it can't perform live.
That will never change.