Plug in the musical style you want, a genre and a prompt for lyrics and Suno can spit out a full song for you in a matter of seconds.
One of Suno’s co-founders, Mikey Shulman, told Rolling Stone that the aim of Suno is not to replace artists, but to make the app fun and democratise the creation of music by making it more accessible to others. But the main point of contention with the tool is whether or not it was trained on copyrighted material. Guardian Australia asked Suno to clarify this but did not get a reply by deadline.
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