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Some of the world's leading AI researchers put musicologists, scholars and composers together with artificial intelligence tools to complete Beethoven's unfinished 10th symphony. This audacious experiment in computer-assisted creativity helps define the outer limits of what the technology can do, while highlighting all that is indelibly human about great works of art. To explore this, we interviewed Rutgers computer science professor and Beethoven X AI team leader Ahmed Elgammal, and composer Walter Werzowa. Beethoven scholar and composer Barry Cooper and author/composer Jan Swafford give us their views on where Beethoven X falls short.
Be sure to check out Dr. Elgammal's website https://www.playform.io
There you will find fun, easy-to-use tools for exploring the power of AI to generate images, manipulate photos and help artists be more creative.
Sony has been working away at using AI to generate music. Their projects include a fantastic Web site and app called Flow Machines. Check it out here: https://www.flow-machines.com/
Here is the "fruit" of Sony's earlier effort to use AI to clone a Beatle's song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSHZ_b05W7o
Amazon also gets you in on the fun by making it easy to explore machine learning while making music. They've cut the price of their $99 keyboard/computing resources package to $39.99 for the "AWS DeepComposer" set. Find details here: https://aws.amazon.com/deepcomposer/
Back in 1988, before AI could have been considered as a creative tool, Dr. Barry Cooper was bringing the world his version of Beethoven's 10th -- the first movement. You can listen to that 1988 recording here: https://youtu.be/To4HHCZtNXg
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