Re: Predictions: where is music going to go in the next century?
Posted: Fri May 21, 2021 11:23 am
This is my favorite topic!
My guess is that artificial intelligence technologies using brain-computer interfaces will transform music ideation and music making from distinct activities into an omnipresent stream which will be indistinguishable from the totality of our collective digital/analog being. Traditional instruments, recording technology and music venues won't make sense to future generations where music making ceases to be a way that we divide time in discrete moments and is simply a river of data that we can dip into concurrently along with the other streams of data which are under our control, including--and especially--dreaming. I fear that as I get into my 80s, it will be harder and harder to resist placing myself into this constant dream state where I can pursue whatever music I hear in my head. When a piece of software can play back to me (and others) a stream of music directly from my brain in close to real-time, why wouldn't I devote all my time to perfecting that state of being? The macro implications of this technology in other parts of life, though, will probably leave me with bigger problems such as the loss of identity and the inability to envision life after death. But I will finally be able to effortlessly nail the guitar parts from "Into The Lens" just by thinking of them!
My guess is that artificial intelligence technologies using brain-computer interfaces will transform music ideation and music making from distinct activities into an omnipresent stream which will be indistinguishable from the totality of our collective digital/analog being. Traditional instruments, recording technology and music venues won't make sense to future generations where music making ceases to be a way that we divide time in discrete moments and is simply a river of data that we can dip into concurrently along with the other streams of data which are under our control, including--and especially--dreaming. I fear that as I get into my 80s, it will be harder and harder to resist placing myself into this constant dream state where I can pursue whatever music I hear in my head. When a piece of software can play back to me (and others) a stream of music directly from my brain in close to real-time, why wouldn't I devote all my time to perfecting that state of being? The macro implications of this technology in other parts of life, though, will probably leave me with bigger problems such as the loss of identity and the inability to envision life after death. But I will finally be able to effortlessly nail the guitar parts from "Into The Lens" just by thinking of them!