YouTube has revealed an artificial intelligence tool that allows users to imitate pop stars like Demi Lovato and John Legend.
The experimental feature, called Dream Track, allows users to create short songs by describing qualities including lyrical content and mood.
Nine artists have allowed their voice to be “cloned” by the software, including Charli XCX, Troye Sivan, T-Pain and Sia.
For now, about 100 creators in the US have been given access to the tool, which can only be used to soundtrack videos on YouTube Shorts – the platform’s rival to TikTok.
The company released two sample videos created with Dream Track, featuring passable, but clearly inferior, imitations of Charlie Puth and T-Pain.
The Puth track was generated by the prompt: “A ballad about how opposites attract, upbeat acoustic.”
The result feels like a low-quality MP3, full of digital artifacts. At times, Puth’s voice sounds “smudged” with consonants that are occasionally muddied and indistinct.
But the track is recognisably in the style of his R&B-leaning pop hits; and the lyrics, while banal, fit the bill: “Baby, we’ve got nothing in common / But I know I’m what you’ve been wanting.”
In a blog post, YouTube’s head of music said the tool was designed to “test, learn, gain feedback and hear ideas” from artists and viewers.
“At this initial phase, the experiment is designed to help explore how the technology could be used to create deeper connections between artists and creators, and ultimately, their fans,” said Lyor Cohen, external, who previously helped launch the careers of artists like Run-DMC, and the Beastie Boys.
Credit: BBC News