Suno and The Cuckoo – Kevin’s Meandering Thoughts
On this fourth iteration of exploration of hen tune, AI platforms and music composition (see put up one — put up two — put up three), I took among the ideas of hen tune sounds and music composition into the AI song-making platform, Suno, and gave it directions about making a delicate people tune, with the And Then There’s The Cuckoo title from yesterday’s podcast remix, added among the informational textual content from my earlier use of Google’s Study About and NotebookLM, and hit “create”.
You’ll be able to take a take heed to the tune it created.
I imply, Suno does an honest job with that I gave it. Every time I exploit Suno, I get the identical sense that that is fairly superb (and that the standard improves each few months) and likewise, I fear about whose sounds have been gulped into the machine to create this AI music. The vocals right here sound acquainted to my ear, however I can’t fairly place whose voice it feels like. The piano is slightly beautiful, too. And there are little touches right here and there that make it for an attention-grabbing hear.
The lyrics under are what the Suno AI generated with my immediate.
And Then There’s The Cuckoo
[Verse]
Within the hush of daybreak’s first mild
The place oak and willow stand tall
Composers discover their desires alight
With the thrush’s beck and name[Verse 2]
A robin weaves a melody
So uncooked
Untouched by man
Its notes encourage symphony
In hearts the place desires started[Chorus]
After which there’s the cuckoo’s sound
Echoing by the wooden
In its tune
A reality is discovered
The place nature’s voice stood[Verse 3]
The blackbird’s tune
A haunting thread
A whisper of days passed by
Its cadence fills the center with dread
But lifts it to the sky[Verse 4]
Beneath the lark’s ascending glee
A composer pens his line
Caught within the wild’s euphony
The place ideas of rapture twine[Chorus]
After which there’s the cuckoo’s name
A notice so pure and clear
It rings inside the live performance corridor
And chases away the worry
Peace (and tune),
Kevin