The song “Walk My Walk” by country group Breaking Rust recently reached No. 1 on Billboard’s Country Digital Song Sales chart. However, the raspy cowboy singing the tune is nothing but a series of code. Breaking Rust is a product of artificial intelligence and “Walk My Walk” is now the first AI-generated song to top this particular chart in US music history. The song’s success raises questions about the effect of AI slop on art and how its use will affect creatives everywhere.
AI music is “no longer a fantasy or niche curiosity”, said Billboard. It is “already beginning to have an impact” on music charts. Breaking Rust has amassed more than two million listeners on Spotify, with multiple songs that have been streamed in excess of one million times. The platform lists someone named Aubierre Rivaldo Taylor as the composer and lyricist of the group, though that name “appears connected only to Breaking Rust and a separate AI music project called Defbeatsai”, said the San Francisco Chronicle. Many question whether Taylor is a real person at all.
Even on the same chart, another AI-generated musician, Cain Walker, holds the third, ninth and 11th spots. Over the summer a number of songs by the indie band Velvet Sundown, another AI-generated group, surpassed one million streams on Spotify. As technology is advancing, much of the AI slop is “nearly indistinguishable from the real thing”, said country music platform Whiskey Riff. This “poses a risk to actual artists, songwriters and fans who value real art”. And the problem is only likely to get worse, especially given the sheer volume of output. The streaming platform Deezer receives more than 50,000 fully AI-generated tracks every day, according to a report by the company. |