EPISODE · Dec 20, 2025 · 6 MIN
Why Serious Composers Should Not Use AI as a Creative Tool | iServalan | Continuum Approach
from Continuum Music Studio · host Sarnia de la Maré FRSA
Why Serious Composers Should Not Use AI as a Creative ToolThere is a growing pressure on composers to embrace AI as a creative partner—an insistence that resisting it is nostalgic, elitist, or fearful of progress. This framing is false. Serious composers are not rejecting technology; they are rejecting the misrepresentation of authorship.AI may be useful in processes.It can never be justified as a tool for creative composition.And the difference matters.Creation Is Not AssemblyComposition is not the act of assembling pleasing patterns.It is the act of choosing—under constraint, risk, memory, failure, and intention.Every meaningful composition is the result of:lived experienceaesthetic judgementphysical interaction with soundcultural placementemotional consequenceAI possesses none of these.It does not intend.It does not hesitate.It does not risk being wrong.It predicts.AI Is Fundamentally UnoriginalAI systems do not create new musical language. They interpolate existing ones.All generative music models are trained on existing human-made work, statistically analysing:pitch relationshipsrhythmic tendenciesharmonic probabilitiesstylistic signaturesWhat emerges is not originality, but averaged familiarity.This is not an insult—it is a technical fact.AI cannot:reject precedentbreak a system it does not understanddevelop a personal syntaxrespond to silence as meaningcreate tension through restraintinvent form through failureEvery “new” result is a recombination of what already exists.Groundbreaking art, by contrast, often fails before it works.AI never fails. It only optimises.Emotion Cannot Be Simulated Into ExistenceMusic does not contain emotion.Emotion emerges through human perception of intentional gesture.When a composer distorts time, fractures form, or denies resolution, the listener senses a human struggle behind the sound.AI has no inner life to encode.No body to resist.No fear of exposure.No personal stake.An AI-generated lament is not sad.It merely resembles music that once accompanied sadness.This distinction is not philosophical—it is perceptual. Listeners intuitively detect when music lacks human risk.Tools Are Not the Same as AuthorsThere is an important and often deliberately blurred distinction here.AI-like systems have been used in music for decades in non-creative roles, including:pitch correction and tuning analysistempo detection and alignmentaudio restoration and noise reductionorchestration mock-upsscore layout and notation optimisationspectral analysis and timbral visualisationrecommendation systemsadaptive mixing and mastering assistanceThese tools operate after or around human creative decisions.They do not decide:what should existwhy it should existor whether it should exist at allA DAW suggesting chord substitutions is not composing, it is assisting.A model generating entire works might appear to be but we know otherwise.The moment authorship is transferred, the work ceases to be composition and becomes output management.AI Collapses Aesthetic ResponsibilitySerious composers are accountable to:their influencestheir audiencetheir traditiontheir ethical stancetheir own failuresAI assumes no responsibility.When a work is hollow, clichéd, or ethically compromised, the composer cannot point to a model and claim authorship with integrity. Delegating creative decision-making also delegates aesthetic courage.Groundbreaking music has always required the willingness to:sound wrongoffend tastefail publiclywork in isolationresist efficiencyAI is built to remove exactly these pressures.Innovation Comes From Limits, Not ScaleHuman composers work within constraints:physical abilitytimememorytrainingculturepersonal obsessionThese limits shape voice.AI has no limits—only scale.Scale does not produce insight.It produces saturation.The result is a vast increase in musical noise, not musical meaning.The Cost Is Cultural, Not TechnicalWhen AI-generated music is normalised as composition, several things happen:originality becomes stylistic mimicryvoice becomes optionalauthorship becomes obscuredexcellence becomes statisticalrisk becomes inefficientThis does not democratise music.It devalues it.True accessibility comes from education, time, patience, and mentorship, not from bypassing the act of learning to listen and choose.Conclusion: Process Is Not CreationSerious composers should not reject AI out of fear.They should reject it out of clarity.AI may assist:workflowanalysispreparationtranslation between systemsIt must never be allowed to replace:intentionjudgementriskiServalan™Music, listening, and the Continuum Approach: Exploring sound across genres, eras, and performance cultures — from Baroque to punk, hip-hop to minimalism — without hierarchy or haste.🎧 Podcast & essays: 🎻 Music Schoolhttps://iservalan.gumroad.com/l/concervatoire?https://iservalan.gumroad.com📚 Books & long-form work by Sarnia de la Maré FRSA:https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/author/B0CWGX2DJ6🎨 Professional profile:https://www.a-n.co.uk/person/sarnia-de-la-mare-frsa-2/#iServalan #ContinuumApproach #MusicPodcast #RadicalListening #MusicAcrossGenres#PerformanceCulture #SarniaDeLaMaré
What this episode covers
Why Serious Composers Should Not Use AI as a Creative ToolThere is a growing pressure on composers to embrace AI as a creative partner—an insistence that resisting it is nostalgic, elitist, or fearful of progress. This framing is false. Serious composers are not rejecting technology; they are rejecting the misrepresentation of authorship.AI may be useful in processes.It can never be justified as a tool for creative composition.And the difference matters.Creation Is Not AssemblyComposition is not the act of assembling pleasing patterns.It is the act of choosing—under constraint, risk, memory, failure, and intention.Every meaningful composition is the result of:lived experienceaesthetic judgementphysical interaction with soundcultural placementemotional consequenceAI possesses none of these.It does not intend.It does not hesitate.It does not risk being wrong.It predicts.AI Is Fundamentally UnoriginalAI systems do not create new musical language. They interpolate existing ones.All generative music models are trained on existing human-made work, statistically analysing:pitch relationshipsrhythmic tendenciesharmonic probabilitiesstylistic signaturesWhat emerges is not originality, but averaged familiarity.This is not an insult—it is a technical fact.AI cannot:reject precedentbreak a system it does not understanddevelop a personal syntaxrespond to silence as meaningcreate tension through restraintinvent form through failureEvery “new” result is a recombination of what already exists.Groundbreaking art, by contrast, often fails before it works.AI never fails. It only optimises.Emotion Cannot Be Simulated Into ExistenceMusic does not contain emotion.Emotion emerges through human perception of intentional gesture.When a composer distorts time, fractures form, or denies resolution, the listener senses a human struggle behind the sound.AI has no inner life to encode.No body to resist.No fear of exposure.No personal stake.An AI-generated lament is not sad.It merely resembles music that once accompanied sadness.This distinction is not philosophical—it is perceptual. Listeners intuitively detect when music lacks human risk.Tools Are Not the Same as AuthorsThere is an important and often deliberately blurred distinction here.AI-like systems have been used in music for decades in non-creative roles, including:pitch correction and tuning analysistempo detection and alignmentaudio restoration and noise reductionorchestration mock-upsscore layout and notation optimisationspectral analysis and timbral visualisationrecommendation systemsadaptive mixing and mastering assistanceThese tools operate after or around human creative decisions.They do not decide:what should existwhy it should existor whether it should exist at allA DAW suggesting chord substitutions is not composing, it is assisting.A model generating entire works might appear to be but we know otherwise.The moment authorship is transferred, the work ceases to be composition and becomes output management.AI Collapses Aesthetic ResponsibilitySerious composers are accountable to:their influencestheir audiencetheir traditiontheir ethical stancetheir own failuresAI assumes no responsibility.When a work is hollow, clichéd, or ethically compromised, the composer cannot point to a model and claim authorship with integrity. Delegating creative decision-making also delegates aesthetic courage.Groundbreaking music has always required the willingness to:sound wrongoffend tastefail publiclywork in isolationresist efficiencyAI is built to remove...
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Why Serious Composers Should Not Use AI as a Creative Tool | iServalan | Continuum Approach
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