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How AI gave me my voice back – an artist's review of Suno Studio

blog.andyshand.com
55 points·by 80hd·9 mesi fa·103 comments

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80hd
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Was about to complain about the pricing (more expensive than newly released 5.3 Codex?) but then I noticed that Auto/Composer mode appears to be billed separately now -- so I can use $400 of API in _addition_ to Auto/Composer?

Am I right in thinking that's a separate allowance? That's pretty cool if so
80hd
·5 mesi fa·discuss
I mostly agree, almost everything is possible for almost everyone, but some people have hurdles to overcome that would probably take their entire life to overcome.

Having said that, some people choose that path anyway, and sometimes they actually end up mastering the field from the bottom up in a completely new way that no one else would ever think to do.

I say this on the off-chance someone reading this is one of those people. But yeah, I'm not gonna try grow from 5'7 to 6'4 or sprint faster than Usain Bolt. But more power to anyone who tries!
80hd
·8 mesi fa·discuss
There's nothing wrong with being unhappy, IMO - you can still channel those emotions into something meaningful.

But if you do want to be happy, you can find stories, if you look hard and long enough, of "outliers". People who, against all odds, defied "statistics" and broke out of whatever expectations society and "facts" projected onto them.

I tried "everything" until age ~27 when I finally found one dial (very specific elimination diet) that made the rest of my body act mostly normally. Other changes were easier to make from that point onwards, altho there's a lot of damage to undo still. Diet is just one factor, for others it could be completely different.

My point is - I thought I would never be healthy. This stuff runs in my family too. But I just kept trying things. There's no other option.

You are a unique human being and soul who has something valuable to contribute to this world. Even if that's being unhappy.

Hope that doesn't sound condescending, it's something I tell myself too.
80hd
·9 mesi fa·discuss
Insane velocity from the Cursor team. I wonder how they move so fast?
80hd
·10 mesi fa·discuss
Sure

https://suno.com/song/5be7dd78-8af8-40a4-bb79-9dd5a9e8b71b https://suno.com/song/24f88c40-8459-4f67-8d51-30298d6b9d00 https://suno.com/song/b0c6f4a6-4523-4b39-bbbd-24a0d39a8b6c
80hd
·10 mesi fa·discuss
I wasn't expecting to, but I got chills listening to some Suno creations from artists who are clearly very talented at using this new medium.

Much like those of us hammering away at LLMs who eventually get incredible results through persistence, people are doing the same with these other AI tools, creating in an entirely new way.

I'm sure Suno are working hard on this and these AI tools can only come together as fast as we can figure out the UX for all this stuff, but I'm holding out for when I can guide the music with specific melodies using voice or midi.

For "conventional" musicians, we (or at least I) would love to have that level of control. Often we know exactly what it should sound like, but might not have session musicians or expensive VSTs (or patience) on hand to get exactly the sound we want. Currently we make do with what we have - but this tech could allow many to take their existing productions to the next level.
80hd
·11 mesi fa·discuss
After using Ableton for years and previously Logic, I've never used music software that evolves as fast as Bitwig. The rate at which they improve it is pretty mind-blowing in comparison.
80hd
·11 mesi fa·discuss
Not OP but my two cents - probably laziness and propensity towards daydreaming.

I have extreme intolerance to boredom. I can't do the same job twice. Some people don't care.

This pain has caused me to become incredibly effective with LLMs because I'm always looking for an easier way to do anything.

If you keep hammering away at a problem - i.e. how to code with LLMs - you tend to become dramatically better at other people who don't do that.
80hd
·11 mesi fa·discuss
Character consistency is great without any upfront fine tuning, nice!
80hd
·11 mesi fa·discuss
Seconding this. My work has had the same problem - by the time I've got things all hooked up, figured out the complicated stuff - my brain (and body) clock out and I have to drag myself through hell to get to 100%. Even with ADHD stimulant medication. It didn't make it emotionally easier, just _possible_ lol.

LLMs, particularly Claude 4 and now GPT-5 are fantastic at working through these todo lists of tiny details. Perfectionism + ADHD not a fun combo, but it's way more bearable. It will only get better.

We have a huge moat in front of us of ever-more interesting tasks as LLMs race to pick up the pieces. I've never been more excited about the future of tech
80hd
·anno scorso·discuss
I've been asking myself this since AI started to become useful.

Most people would guess it threatens their identity. Sensitive intellectuals who found a way to feel safe by acquiring deep domain-specific expertise suddenly feel vulnerable.

In addition, a programmer's job, on the whole, has always been something like modelling the world in a predictable way so as to minimise surprise.

When things change at this rate/scale, it also goes against deep rooted feelings about the way things should work (they shouldn't change!)

Change forces all of us to continually adapt and to not rest on our laurels. Laziness is totally understandable, as is the resulting anger, but there's no running away from entropy :}