The type of AI music that distributors will reject is something you used AI to produce that could deceive or trick paying consumers: for example, impersonating a well-know vocalist or creating a track that sounds an awful lot like a named artist. You can see where that can trick people into listening to something that isn't genuine.
You're not doing that: you're using a synthesis tool to generate a sound, no different than using formant synthesis to produce a sample that says "Hello," or creating a backing track based on your voice or your lyrics. Or using a Yamaha DX7, Omnisphere, or Kontakt to produce a cello sound.
I'm not aware of any distributor that even cares what tools you used to produce the music as long as the music is yours and yours alone. When you upload your track, there's not even going to be a metadata question on this.
You're not doing that: you're using a synthesis tool to generate a sound, no different than using formant synthesis to produce a sample that says "Hello," or creating a backing track based on your voice or your lyrics. Or using a Yamaha DX7, Omnisphere, or Kontakt to produce a cello sound.
I'm not aware of any distributor that even cares what tools you used to produce the music as long as the music is yours and yours alone. When you upload your track, there's not even going to be a metadata question on this.
Statistics: Posted by Watchful — Mon Mar 17, 2025 8:49 pm