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The Future of Music is Closer Than You Think

Metadata

title
The Future of Music is Closer Than You Think
description
What can we do to prepare? What skills do we need to survive? I think there are three simple (yet crazy hard) skills that will endure, regardless of robot takeover or software company supremacy.
status
complete
date
2025-08-12
kind
solo
guestSlugs
listenUrl
https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lovemusicmore/episodes/The-Future-of-Music-is-Closer-Than-You-Think-e36mfqg
appleUrl
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-future-of-music-is-closer-than-you-think/id1567355195?i=1000721618806&uo=4
spotifyUrl
https://open.spotify.com/episode/33koTAFJ2AMK28XcW4bGeo
topicsDiscussed
  • AI
  • Creativity
  • Music production
  • Developing musical taste
  • The role of producers
  • Navigating industry changes
  • Identifying musical trends
  • Tech and artistry
  • Embracing weaknesses
  • Future skills for musicians
hostNote
The subtlety of having taste is about asking what problem you're actually trying to solve, and that question doesn't go away no matter how good the software gets. I think there are three skills that survive the current disruption, and none of them are about keeping up with tools. Being **clever** is about seeing systems: spotting the gaps, reading trends before they saturate, knowing which problem you're actually working on. Being **creative** is about range, not in a limiting sense, but understanding what is genuinely yours versus what you're borrowing and how far you can stretch either. **Taste** is the hardest to articulate, and I spend the most time there: it's less about preference and more about judgment under constraint. The episode doesn't predict who wins the AI race. It maps the durable capacities underneath whoever does, so you know what's worth developing regardless of which software company ends up on top.
selectedMoments
  • label
    Introducing the three essential skills for musicians
    startSec
    102
    note
    I outline the key concepts for artists navigating an AI-driven future.
  • label
    The importance of being clever in the music industry
    startSec
    156
    note
    I discuss identifying gaps and trends.
  • label
    Finding your unique creative voice
    startSec
    234
    note
    I encourage artists to understand their strengths.
  • label
    The evolving role of musicians
    startSec
    600
    note
    I reflect on musicians as producers and creators.
  • label
    Crafting your vision in music
    startSec
    663
    note
    I emphasize the importance of personal vision.
  • label
    Being authentic in your artistic expression
    startSec
    318
    note
    I talk about transforming weaknesses into strengths.
excerptQuotes
  • text
    Everything that's going on with AI, with sampling, with all of the software companies that are obviously a very big deal in music...
    startSec
    96
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    Being clever, being clever I think is more about seeing the systems...
    startSec
    138
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    Finding about like what is you, like where's your range?
    startSec
    320
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    The subtlety of having taste is about what problem am I actually trying to solve?
    startSec
    655
    reviewed
    true
faq
  • question
    What skills do musicians need for the future?
    answer
    I discuss the importance of being clever, creative, and having good taste as the essential skills for musicians to adapt to an AI-driven future.
  • question
    How can artists embrace their weaknesses?
    answer
    I suggest that artists can turn their weaknesses into strengths by understanding their unique voice and using those qualities to connect with their audience.
  • question
    What do you forecast for musicians in relation to AI and technology?
    answer
    I believe musicians will increasingly need to become versatile in technology, much like software engineers, as AI becomes an integral part of music creation.
transcriptPublished
false
draft
false

Content

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