Future of the music industry

Golden Hall

The song is ringing loud
Oct 16, 2003
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Santa Cruz, CA
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I always joked that the major record companies had a big computer that spit out new songs for all the boy bands, rap groups, Britney's, etc. according to whatever the new hit was supposed to sound like, I didn't realize how close I was to the truth.

Read this article, I know how everbody in here feels about the mainstream music industry, but this is still pretty fucking sad:

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/14/magazine/14HIT.html
 
Golden Hall said:
I always joked that the major record companies had a big computer that spit out new songs for all the boy bands, rap groups, Britney's, etc. according to whatever the new hit was supposed to sound like, I didn't realize how close I was to the truth.

Read this article, I know how everbody in here feels about the mainstream music industry, but this is still pretty fucking sad:

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/14/magazine/14HIT.html

So I'm to create an account with yet another username and a password. I don't think so.
 
Golden Hall said:
I always joked that the major record companies had a big computer that spit out new songs for all the boy bands, rap groups, Britney's, etc. according to whatever the new hit was supposed to sound like, I didn't realize how close I was to the truth.

Read this article, I know how everbody in here feels about the mainstream music industry, but this is still pretty fucking sad:

[url]http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/14/magazine/14HIT.html[/QUOTE[/url]]
why dont you just copy it to the forum? so all can see.
 
Shit, you guys need to relax, I didn't realize it was a subscription deal, I was using somebody elses computer, anyways, here it is


December 14, 2003

Hit Song Science
By CLIVE THOMPSON

hen Norah Jones released her first album, she was a long shot at best. ''Come Away With Me'' was filled with mellow, sultry tunes -- precisely the opposite of the histrionic diva pop crowding the charts. Virtually no one expected Jones to score a major hit.

No one, that is, except for a piece of artificial intelligence called Hit Song Science, a program that tries to determine, with mathematical precision, whether a song is going to be a Top 40 hit. When the scientists fed Jones's album into that computer, alarm bells went off: the program predicted that eight tracks would hit the charts. ''We were like, whoa, that's funky,'' says Mike McCready, the C.E.O. of Polyphonic HMI, the Barcelona-based company that developed the software application. A few months later, Jones's album went multiplatinum -- and Hit Song Science had proved it could pick a hit as well as Clive Davis.

But how? At the heart of the program is a ''clustering'' algorithm that locates acoustic similarities between songs, like common bits of rhythm, harmonies or keys. The software takes a new tune and compares it with the mathematical signatures of the last 30 years of Top 40 hits. The closer the song is to ''a hit cluster,'' the more likely -- in theory -- that the kids won't be able to resist it. Yet the weird thing is, songs that are mathematically similar don't necessarily sound the same. The scientists found that U2 is similar to Beethoven, and that Van Halen shares qualities with the piano rock of Vanessa Carlton. Even more bizarrely, 50 Cent's throbbing rap tune ''If I Can't'' correlates with ''(There's) No Gettin' Over Me,'' a twangy country ditty by Ronnie Milsap.

This year, several record companies began using Hit Song Science to help pick which songs on an album to promote. Others are now using it in the studio, taking a rough mix of a new song, checking to see how hit-worthy it is, then tweaking it until it has ''good mathematics,'' as McCready puts it. He can foresee a day when most major hits will have been vetted by algorithms.

Which is, depending on how you look at it, either a wonderful breakthrough for science or an incredibly bleak statement about the music industry. Critics for years have complained that record labels produce only bland albums that mimic what's already popular. But Hit Song Science takes that trend to its logical absurdity: it does not merely aim at the middle of the road -- it calculates it, with scientific precision.
 
It just shows the "popular" music industry up for what it really is. Eventually it's gonna become a victim of its own consequences. It bugs me to hell when I see these manufactured bands on TV but at the end of the day it doesn't bother me too much because they only people buying the shit are the ones who generally don't have a fucking clue about decent, real music anyway. If this continues the way it does maybe even the retards buying the music themselves will realise how blindly they've been fooled by the money hungry suits...
 
God Damn.... That is sad. A computer telling you what is going to be famous... Hmm I wonder what would happen if Amon Amarth would be fed into that "computer." I know that the computer is unwothy to hear the masterpieces Amon Amarth puts out, but still I wonder...