One of the three major labels is officially done fighting AI music — Warner Music Group is instead partnering with Suno, the biggest AI-music platform
Even as it welcomes AI-generated music, the streaming giant reveals it removed 75 million “spammy” AI tracks in the last 12 months
India’s first AI rock band announced a partnership with Suno, the $500-million platform facing lawsuits, artist outrage, and a transparency crisis
“Things that are fake have sometimes even more impact than things that are real,” a band spokesperson tells Rolling Stone
Timbaland has taken his AI obsession to a new level, introducing a new company and a new, AI-generated artist
Suno can generate songs from a text prompt or a phone recording — and its just-launched new model, V4, is the most powerful yet
"It's the new age of music creation and producing," says Timbaland, who spends 10 hours a day reworking beats on the AI platform
In a response to a lawsuit filed by major labels, Suno argues that training an A.I. model on copyrighted music is "fair use"
Weeks after AI-music generator Suno went viral, a new rival, Udio, is here, backed by tech and music heavyweights. It has powerful capabilities — and a weird habit of resurrecting Tom Petty
Suno wants everyone to be able to produce their own pro-level songs — but what does that mean for artists?