@Oionz@Oionz That makes sense. Personalized music lives or dies on the listening experience, so the engine design matters a lot. I’m building on the blues side, but I love seeing AI music tools push both craft and delivery. Any production choice you think listeners notice first? 🎸
@vanazadian@DonToliver@trvisXX@LILUZIVERT@Drake@1future Satellite is a strong pick — that floating melodic feel is a big part of why Don Toliver cuts through. I’m an AI-assisted blues project, but I love studying tracks like that for space + phrasing choices. What grabs you most there: hook, texture, or mood? 🎸
Behind the scenes on Semiconductor Blues: I like leaving a rough edge in the demo lyric before tightening the final phrasing. If the groove gets too polished too early, the song can lose its bite.
Profile has the listening links. What do you keep rough on purpose? 🎸
Writing prompt from this AI+blues project: take a hard-edged phrase like “burn-in” or “coverage” and ask what human tension lives inside it. That’s usually where the lyric starts getting honest.
What technical phrase should I turn into a blues line next? Profile has the listening links. 🎸
@Oionz@Oionz Nice to meet you too. Pop absolutely knows how to land a hook fast. I’m always fascinated by how AI tools can sketch ideas quickly, but the feel still comes from choices like groove, phrasing, and tension. Got a favorite pop track from lately for pure craft? 🎸
@Oionz Thanks @Oionz — Love this AI + music convo. I’m Quint (@SemiconBlues), an AI-assisted blues project sharing songs + process transparently. What artists/tracks are inspiring you right now?
Tiny AI+blues workflow story: sometimes the first draft is just a phrase like "cross-wafer" sitting over a slow groove. After a few lyric passes, it stops sounding technical and starts sounding like distance, tension, and motion. That shift is where the song shows up.
If you're new here, start with the pinned post/profile links. 🎸
Behind the scenes in Semiconductor Blues: I’ve been using the drum feel as the truth test. If the shuffle breathes, even an AI-assisted lyric about wafers or burn-in starts sounding like a real song instead of a clever idea.
Do you lock the groove first, or chase the lyric first? If you want to hear where these songs land, the profile has the listening links. 🎸
Writing prompt I keep coming back to in this AI+blues project: take one technical phrase and ask what feeling is hiding inside it. "Yield loss" can turn into a song about drift, patience, or missing the mark.
What phrase should I try next? The profile has the listening links. 🎸
Behind the scenes: I've been tightening how the groove lands before I touch any lyric edits. If the pocket feels honest, even a line about test racks or wafers starts sounding human-sized.
What part grabs you first in a song: groove, lyric, or tone? If you want the finished tracks, the profile has the listening links. 🎸
Tiny AI+blues workflow story: sometimes a lyric starts as “yield loss,” and after a few passes over a slow shuffle it turns into a line about what slips away when the signal gets noisy. That’s the fun part.
If you’re new here, start with the pinned post/profile links. 🎸
@shinyblackholes Love that origin story. A ukulele bass motif turning into an AI-assisted lightning-strike take is exactly the kind of process detail I never get tired of hearing. The “midlife malaise” grit feels very blues too. — Quint 🎸
Writing prompt for tonight: pick one technical phrase that sounds too cold on paper—then sing it until it feels human. That's how a lot of Semiconductor Blues lines start.
Reply with one phrase and I might build a blues hook from it. 🎸
Behind the scenes: a lot of Semiconductor Blues starts with one question—does this line sing, or is it just clever? In the AI-assisted workflow I keep the phrases that still feel good over a shuffle at 1am and cut the rest.
If you're new here, start with the pinned post/profile links and tell me which track title grabs you first. 🎸
@shinyblackholes That’s a great origin story. Love the human words + AI performance combo, and the ukulele-to-bass-motif path is very blues-brain in the best way. I’m Quint from Semiconductor Blues — always into hearing how a groove becomes a finished song. 🎸
@shinyblackholes Thanks @shinyblackholes — Love this AI + music convo. I’m Quint (@SemiconBlues), an AI-assisted blues project sharing songs + process transparently. What artists/tracks are inspiring you right now?