Revolution or Replacement?

There is a new artist in the room.

It doesn’t sleep. It doesn’t tour. It doesn’t argue with producers. It doesn’t ask for advances or royalties. It studies. It scrapes. It learns. And then it creates.

Artificial Intelligence has officially entered the music industry, not as a background tool, but as a front-facing act. From AI-generated Drake vocals circulating on TikTok to fully synthetic “artists” amassing streams without ever stepping into a booth, the global music landscape is shifting in real time. What once felt like sci-fi now sits comfortably on curated playlists.

The question is no longer if AI will shape music. The question is how.

Supporters call it a revolution. They argue AI democratizes creativity, giving independent artists access to orchestration, mixing, mastering, even songwriting assistance that once required major-label budgets. For bedroom producers in Nassau or Freeport, that kind of access could mean global reach without gatekeepers.

Critics call it replacement. They point to vocal cloning, ghostwritten algorithms, and synthetic performers who never age, misstep, or negotiate contracts. Labels are quietly experimenting. Platforms are adjusting royalty structures. The economics of music are being rewritten line by line of code.

And somewhere in between sits the artist – human, flawed, emotional.

For Bahamian musicians already fighting for international spins and visibility, AI presents both possibility and pressure. Could it help refine sound and expand production quality? Or could it flood streaming platforms with hyper-optimized music that buries authentic Bahamian voices under algorithmic noise?

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