“Stop typing for the third time!” My primary school teacher screams from the whole room. I don't have to hear her in the first two times. I had stepped back on the desk and used my fingers for sticks and the floor underneath for a step drum. While my body was in math lessons, my spirit was somewhere else.
It was 1970. I was John Bonham, drummer of the legendary rock band Led Zeppelin, on the stage in the Royal Albert Hall and played “Moby Dick” – one of the best -known drum solos of all time. The lights are low, the atmosphere electrically, and I thunder with me, everyone beats the amount deeper into my rhythmic spells.
This type of daydreaming happened very much. More than my teacher and my parents would have liked it. But that didn't stop me. Drumming was my creative outlet, an escape from the cyclone of youth – and of course mathematics.
At that time, the ultimate form of musical immersion played the drums to my favorite music. To do this, you had to get drumless traces in your hands. In this way you wouldn't just play With your favorite drummer – you could become Your favorite drummer.
But in the early 2000s it was almost impossible to remove drums from a song. The only way was to get an original recording of the band in the hands that play the song without drums. There were some of these tracks that were distributed on the Internet or were recorded on CDs, but only for the most popular songs. This technological dead end forced me and millions of others into the role of the backup drummer. If there was only an easy way to remove the drums from a song, I wondered …
Fast lead to this day and my musical dreams have become a reality. There are now several apps that use AI to separate and remove “stems” – such as bass, drums or vocals – from every song. One of them is Moises, which was founded by the Brazilian web developer Geraldo Ramos.
Like me, Ramos is a drummer. In contrast to me, he is also a tech shiz.
“I have been busy with computers for very young, but I also play drums,” Ramos told TNW. “I always had these two tracks in my life: music as a hobby and then as a career. With Moises I bought the two together. “
Ramos started Moises for the first time with SPLEETER, an open source AI model that was created by the research team of the French music streaming company Deezer. Spleter was revolutionary for the time, but was built for researchers, not for musicians. Ramos took the model and created it to create an alpha version of the Moises app. Over 50,000 people have registered within the first week.
“It became clear to me that this was only the tip of the iceberg – This new generation of tools can change everything how people create, consume, produce music“, Says Ramos.
Geraldo Ramos, the founder and CEO of Moises
According to Moises, it now has 50 million registered users on their platform. The app is used by amateurs who want to practice their craft. It is also supported by an ensemble of emerging stars.
The YouTube drummer Jorge Garrido, also known as “The Sibirian Estpario”, says that the tool is “a total game changer”.
“Now I can not only play a drum part over the songs that I have cover, but also learn every song by extracting the drums from the original mixture, ”he says TNW.
El Estpario from Valencia, Spain, rose through Viral Instagram videos to fame. The drummer, who has over 4.5 million subscribers on YouTube, belongs to a cohort of young musicians who use technology to perfect their art and reach a wider audience. This increasingly includes the use of artificial intelligence.
“Tools like AI just make things easier,” he says. “You no longer need a doctoral thesis to master, you still need a doctorate in the audio engineering to separate the instruments on a song. Technology is the new democracy for artists. ”
You assess the results in this clip by El Estpario in action:
How do AI separate drums from a song?
The developers of Moises train their algorithms for machine learning on thousands of stems so that the AI can learn to recognize the unique frequencies and rhythms of every instrument. Over time, it will be better to identify and separate these sounds from mixed audio, even if they overlap.
As soon as the AI isolated and removes an instrument, it fills the room by reconstruction of the remaining audio and smoothes all gaps so that it sounds seamless.
While Moises got his break with the song of the song, Since then, it has developed a number of AI tools that aim to help the musicians practice. One of these tools picks up the beat of each song and then adds a metronome to him. Another for guitarists can automatically recognize the chord of a track.
Moises also works on a generative AI tool set that comes onto the market later this year, with which you can create a completely original stem for you.
While Moises designed the first version of his app using Deezer Spleter, a team of data scientists now has a team that builds AI models in their own house.
According to the company, all algorithms are trained on licensed music from studio houses and compositions created by producers in Moises Studios.
Ramos says that the company is committed to “ethical AI”.
“Ninety percent of our team are musicians,” he says. “We don't try to replace real music, but to improve it.”
The good and bad of AI for music
In recent years, the AI has been considerably checked in the creative industry, ranging from copyright infringement to job losses.
Last year, a band of US record labels sued Suno and Udio, two of the best -known AI music generators, claimed to have copyright infringement on a “massive scale”.
With the Udio and Suno tools, users can produce entire songs by entering written descriptions. The companies claim that the use of copyrighted material is under “fair use”, a joint defense From AI company.
Apart from the allegations that AI companies tear off original works, some fear that the use of algorithms to produce music risks that replaces the vital human element that makes every work of art unique.
“I am equally fascinated and horrified ” interview last month. “I expect Al great songs to write. There will be Al -Pop stars and actors who are so popular, if not more than any other person. We will go to shows where the stars are al, but still appear on the stage. Everything will change. “
But Numan believes that human creativity will take. “I think the world has been surprised and entertained by all the miracles that Al will create in the arts. But in the end, when we survive long enough, I hope and suspect that people will slowly return to human art, ”he said.
Others are less Doomsday-Ish.
“The phonograph, the synthesizers, the cassette, the computer and the Internet did not manage to kill the music industry as many feared. Therefore, there is no reason to cling our pearls now. “ Austin Milne, lecturer at London College of Contemporary Music (LCCM), says TNW.
LCCM is one of many music schools that have integrated AI into their teaching approach. However, Milne emphasizes that AI is not a monolith in music.
“There are some types that take the authorship and people out of the equation, and others who only accelerate processes, and the musicians are already doing manually,” he says.
It is an important distinction – like any powerful tool, it is How AI is managed, which makes the difference.
Regardless of whether AI pop stars use their human colleagues or not, I am more happy about the potential of technology to improve my drum game. Thank you, thank you, machines that I could experience my musical fantasies again.
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