I've been using Udio for a few days now, but didn't realize that you could have a pretty decent control over its output. Thank you for making this Mike.
This is awesome for jingles, easy to create, endless opportunities to then download and customise further in a DAW other program. Going to be using this more and more!
For inspiration, sampling, chopping up and adding effects, it'll be good fun though. I would imagine once beta phase is finished, there will be some attribution/cost structure implemented
Regarding the pierogi song: as an alternative to first getting the lyrics in english, then having them translated to a foreign language, you can also ask the chat AI program to actually create a song text in your chosen language, and include a translation for your convenience, this method will ensure better rhyming. I've made two freedom songs in Ukrainian using this method.
Un caloroso saluto dal' Italia. Un gran bel videotutorial ben spiegato ( con traduzione automatica ) bello bello bello, iscritto e superlike. Un saluto, Gio'.
In the dystopian world of George Orwell’s 1984, there is a machine called a “versificator.” The versificator makes what might be called “fake” music-songs that are “composed without any human intervention whatever.” In April of 2016, “A New Rembrandt” was revealed (1). The painting, like the songs of a versificator, was made by machines. In August of 2016, Music Business Worldwide (2) accused Spotify of “creating fake artists.” What is a fake artist? Can music be fake? The world of 1984 is a grim place. Members of the “Party” have access to resources based on their rank. The rest of society are called “Proles.” The term is short for the “proletarian” and refers to the working class. The Proles make up the majority of society, and so the Party provides them with various sources of entertainment to keep them from getting too restless.
@Sneakycat1971 This is true . But lets look around : Lame-stream music industry IS as fake as fake can be . They all sold out to Demonic forces 👿 . Nobody in the right mind listens to them anymore ...So, WE the People need to create OUR OWN music , - good and God-pleasing 🌼 . But since not all of us are musicians - here comes AI to the resque . So, as ironic as it sounds , now created-by-people AI-generated music IS The REAL one ...while main-stream music industry is FAKE one, although technically "created by humans" ( * in reality, by demons 👿 who posses these artists)
I fumbled around with Udio before I saw your video and got some decent results taking lyrics from a South Korean TV soap opera and turning it into a full length ballad. I don't get the results through AI as I would get if I had commissioned the work through a live band but nevertheless its a bit of a laugh and I appreciate your detailed tutorial.
I'm glad my tutorial helped you experiment with Udio and create something unique, even if the AI results are different from a live band - keep having fun with your music projects!
Thanks for the tutorial Mike, much appreciated! Great video! I have a question... I've created some really really good stuff, but I messed up on the order of tracks using (EXTEND) and now what "was" good is not matching up. The intro is out of place etc etc. Do you know of a way to rearrange the order of tracks? Can this be done with a PROMPT? Also, is it just me or does there seem to be a disconnect with the order of consistency within the track itself - or am I doing something wrong?
Hey there! I'm glad you enjoyed the video! Sadly editing is quite basic right now and if something messes up you need to go back to a version that was OK and do the extend again. Would be great to see Udio fix this with some kind of editor in the future.
I recommend experimenting with different voice options and adjusting the settings to find the best match for your voice type to achieve the desired results with Oudimee AI. I didn’t try it yet.
Do I need to go into Audacity and normalize, or increase the gain on a song that Udio generates? Some of them seem quieter than others when I play them back.
Yes, you can normalize or increase the gain in Audacity to adjust the volume of the music generated by Udio if you find that some tracks are quieter than others.
hey thanks for the video but i felt many things said in it r not accurate , for example the tempo and the key, i tried it with many songs and it never gave me the results. but nice AI anyway thanks.
Thanks for the tips in the video 😊. I've been making full blown tracks in udio too. The thing I haven't managed to do is to make it repeat say a chorus with just a little variation. When I extend with the same lyrics, it changes the chorus so much that it feels like a new section' and this even if I tag it chorus...any workaround to do so? Not being to do this hurts the coherence of the track.
I'm glad you found the tips helpful! To maintain coherence and create variations within a repeated chorus, you can try subtle changes in instrumentation, dynamics, or vocal delivery, as well as experimenting with effects like delay or reverb to give it a fresh feel without deviating too much from the original.
Yes, you can publish your AI generated music on various music platforms, including Spotify, after creating it but present T&Cs say you must attribute Udio.
Absolutely! Udio can be a great tool for creating instrumentals for radio jingles, as it offers a wide range of AI-generated music styles to choose from.
It's really lackluster compared to Suno...I know it's still in Beta. But there are many prompts which will result in Udio simply talking. It's almost impossible to get it to sing sometimes...it also can't respond to male or female preference you just have to reroll the dice enough times to get male or female singers. At least they offer pretty much unlimited generations...for a 3 minute song I made I had to use 100+ attempts to get anything usable but the result was very good...but very inconsistent compared to Suno. Also those "scream" "emotional" tags do not work, only sometimes does [Chorus] and [Outro, End] have any effect, sometimes [instrument solo] can also work. They have much more consistent effect in Suno but not in Udio.
I appreciate your detailed feedback on Udio! It's helpful to know about the challenges you faced in using the platform compared to Suno. Thank you for sharing your experience!
@@1Nimbicone I don't know about Sudo but Suno is less robotic than Udio most of the time. There is potential for Udio but it seems like there's some fundamental problems with the AI. I don't believe Suno was ever this stupid at understanding what the user wanted so it seems unlikely it will ever reach the consistency of Suno. If you want to do text to speech, Udio is probably what you want. If you want singing, Suno is far superior which responds relatively well to commands. Udio commonly adds things you didn't put in, glitches out on words, repeats the same words numerous times, is less likely to recognize [words like this] for background singers....then when you get it to sing, if you extend the song it will usually stop after a minute or two into the song. There are times where Udio has great voices, very breathy even...but when it forms words, and puts them together, it's very stilted and robotic even if individual phrases or words sound more authentic....then again like I said there's the consistency; Udio usually can't produce a solid 30 second sample in under 10 or so tries while Suno can pretty consistently produce good results for 2 minutes straight.
Try checking your settings or updating your browser to ensure the manual option is visible on your desktop page for accessing the AI music. I think there was an issue where manual mode recently disappeared for some.
Yes, you can use the music created in Udio for commercial video production projects! As far as I understand the T&C they require attribution in those projects.
@@yeah-I-know Hi, thank you for answering this honestly, I was wondering about this question but what if it's just for entertainment purposes with the video production in short form content? Maybe I'll just add a disclaimer, to be safe, in case. Also if we credit Udio does that make them royalty-free? I'm guessing not but just wanted to double-check, thank you.
@mystic-satiricalist honestly, you simply can't copyright any AI created work. But we live in a world where nobody cares anymore - just look at yt. Everyone is repuropsing others content and don't even credit them. All I am saying is that the author of this channel is misleading you by saying yes to commercial use.
@@yeah-I-know yeah, I'm treading lightly and sticking to royalty free for anything I make and credit anything I need to for now until they find a work around. Thank you for the peace of mind.
@@MikeRussell ty for clearing that up. I checked my history for a video I was watching a few days ago and it was removed from my history and then I typed in adobe audition tutorial with your name and nothing was coming up either so I figured they deleted it.
Thank God for Udio. I hate artists, really hate them. I've always wanted access to creative resources but without benefiting musicians who spend time learning a craft and are trying to make a living. I mean, its one thing to save some money, but to also give a middle finger to musicians in the process? That's just icing on the cake!
@@yeah-I-knowI watched the same video. It was the lawyer with dyed hair? There was a part in it where the only workaround with the music is to write your own lyrics.
considering udio is not ethically trained, it was trained on stolen music, I am surprised you promote it... shame. Udio did not specify how they trained their model, so why is that? Clearly hiding something if you ask me otherwise they would boast about ethicality of their product.
I'm surprised you're so ignorant. Worry more about "your data" that has been stolen along with every living being in the world, to create YOUR digital twin without YOUR consent. How do you think the AI LLMs are being trained? By you and everyone else that has a digital footprint.... Don't care? Well you will soon, enjoy your last day's of the world as you know it..
Would be fascinating for someone to break down how udio works and explains the algorithms it uses. It’s a crucial point to highlight let’s see what gets released or people find out
@@d05music17 search for UDIO AI Exposed, there is video from an attorney going through udio's terms and conditions, it exposes everything. The udio bit starts at 38th minute