AI Music Unmuted

Why AI Makes Great Musicians More Valuable (Not Less)

40 min · 16. april 2026
episode Why AI Makes Great Musicians More Valuable (Not Less) cover

Beskrivelse

Jean-Luc Sinclair musician, composer, sound designer, technologist, educator and author(NYU, Berklee) breaks down what’s really happening at the intersection of AI, sound design, and music production. This is a clear look at how technology is reshaping creativity, why technical skills are rising while creative instincts are slipping, and why AI may actually make experienced musicians more valuable, not less. We get into: * Why AI is a “force multiplier” for experts * The surprising decline in creative skills among new producers * How sound design shapes immersive experiences in games and media * Where AI actually helps (and where it still falls short) * Why taste and decision-making are becoming the most important skills If you’re serious about music, production, or sound design, this is the conversation you should be paying attention to.

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Alle episoder

11 Episoder

episode Does Drum Programming Kill Creativity? cover

Does Drum Programming Kill Creativity?

For a lot of musicians, especially non-drummers, drums can be where the creative process slows down. Not because they are not important, but because programming them can pull musicians out of the moment. It becomes technical, time-consuming, and disconnected from the original idea. In this episode of AI Music Unmuted, David O’Hara talks with Jeremy Jost, a guitarist and developer who ran into that exact problem and built DrumBot AI to solve it. They explore why drum programming feels different from playing, how it can interrupt creative flow, and how AI tools are starting to change that by letting musicians translate ideas into rhythm more naturally. The conversation also gets into feel, groove, and why AI still needs human input to sound musical. As powerful as these tools are, they work best in the hands of people who know what they are listening for. This is not about replacing drummers. It is about removing friction, speeding up the path from idea to execution, and understanding where AI fits in a real music workflow.

I går22 min
episode Why AI Makes Great Musicians More Valuable (Not Less) cover

Why AI Makes Great Musicians More Valuable (Not Less)

Jean-Luc Sinclair musician, composer, sound designer, technologist, educator and author(NYU, Berklee) breaks down what’s really happening at the intersection of AI, sound design, and music production. This is a clear look at how technology is reshaping creativity, why technical skills are rising while creative instincts are slipping, and why AI may actually make experienced musicians more valuable, not less. We get into: * Why AI is a “force multiplier” for experts * The surprising decline in creative skills among new producers * How sound design shapes immersive experiences in games and media * Where AI actually helps (and where it still falls short) * Why taste and decision-making are becoming the most important skills If you’re serious about music, production, or sound design, this is the conversation you should be paying attention to.

16. april 202640 min
episode A Human Approach to AI Music cover

A Human Approach to AI Music

What happens when musicians build AI music tools? In this episode of the RealMusic.ai Podcast, host David O’Hara speaks with Rory, founder of Loudly, about the evolving relationship between artificial intelligence and music creation. Rory shares his journey from touring musician to music tech entrepreneur and explains why many of today’s AI music platforms are being built by people with deep musical backgrounds. The conversation explores how AI is expanding creative possibilities for artists while still relying on human taste, judgment, and musical experience. David and Rory discuss: • Why musicians are playing a bigger role in building AI music technology • How AI can enable creativity for both professionals and new musicians • The role of samples, remixing, and new workflows in modern music production • The realities of streaming economics and how artists are adapting • Why live performance and human musicianship may become even more valuable in the AI era This episode takes a thoughtful look at how AI is reshaping music, not as a replacement for artists, but as a new creative tool.

5. mars 202650 min
episode What 10 Years of AI Taught an Engineer Behind Oscar, Emmy, and Grammy Projects cover

What 10 Years of AI Taught an Engineer Behind Oscar, Emmy, and Grammy Projects

In this episode of the RealMusic.ai Podcast, David O’Hara speaks with Daniel Rowland, VP of Strategy & Partnerships at LANDR Audio, engineer, producer, and educator with over ten years of experience working with AI in music. His career spans studio work, technology leadership, and projects connected to Oscar, Emmy, and Grammy recognition. The conversation moves beyond hype to explore what actually changes when AI enters real music workflows. Daniel shares how his perspective on AI has evolved over a decade, where it genuinely supports musicians and producers, and why human taste, judgment, and intent remain essential to meaningful music. They also discuss AI mastering, the difference between finishing music and creating it, and how artists can use AI as an assistive tool without losing creative identity. This episode offers a grounded, experience-driven look at where AI fits in modern music making.

8. jan. 202644 min
episode Rethinking Music Creation: A Deep Dive with Roland’s Paul McCabe cover

Rethinking Music Creation: A Deep Dive with Roland’s Paul McCabe

In this episode of RealMusic.ai, David O’Hara sits down with Paul McCabe, musician, composer, and Senior Vice President of Research and Innovation at Roland, where he leads the Roland Future Design Lab. Paul shares his 40–year journey from the early days of MIDI and music retail in Canada, through his time as a product specialist and eventually CEO of Roland Canada, to his current global role shaping the future of instruments and music technology. They talk about how spending years directly with musicians shaped the way Paul thinks about design, communication, and building tools that actually fit creative workflows. The conversation moves into how AI is starting to live inside musical hardware, not just software, and how that can support learning, practice, and creativity rather than trying to replace human musicians. Paul and David dig into the real barriers to music making today, including focus and attention, not just time, money, or “talent,” and how ideas borrowed from gaming and connected experiences might help more people stick with an instrument. Paul also explains the story behind AIforMusic.info and why Roland partnered with Universal Music Group to define shared principles for using AI in music responsibly. He closes by discussing Project Lydia, a neural sampling hardware proof of concept built with Raspberry Pi and Neutone, and why Roland is putting it directly into the hands of creators to learn from their reactions before deciding what comes next. If you’re interested in where instruments, AI, and human creativity are really heading, this conversation will give you a grounded, forward-looking perspective.

18. des. 202547 min