Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bydlo
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Please dont take personal what i said. I am just generalizing and trying to think the consecuences of this new tool.
We all been going that way since the day of synths, mics, sampled piano libraries, guitar effecta, melodyne etc.
I think than in this case things are a little different.
Sorry, you just happened to hit a nerve. I've butted up against untrustworthy people in the music business so many times that I can't even count. It's almost always my desire to work with a human, but so often the hassle isn't worth it.
A few years ago I hired a woman to do vocals on a song and she no-showed twice, then finally showed up late, was sick, totally unprepared, and after I had finally gotten enough that I could sew together a decent take, she refused to sign a performance release. Not outright, though. She took the money and said she'd read it and sign it, and just never did, no matter how much I pestered her for it. I was on a deadline, and I ended up having to use someone else, who didn't do as good a job, but at least was good to work with. Ultimately, I wish I had access to AI, as it would have been as good a product and had none of the hassle.
So, maybe in some roundabout way, AI will force singers to behave in a more professional and reasonable way. I did all the sound for a video game last year and we did find two voice actors who were mostly great to work with. Then one of our producers decided to throw a part to one of our QA guys and it was a train wreck. I asked for 24 bit .wav files, and he sent me super compressed .opus files of him mumbling though the lines at very low levels. I didn't even bother asking for a second take. I just redid it myself. It was a robot voice that was going though some effects, so no one really noticed.