• Humphrey 5 hours ago

    - Most time is spent in the iPhone's Notes & Voice Memo apps.

    - I try Rhymezone, but it rarely helps me find a word I hadn't already though of.

    - The Complete Rhyming Dictionary [1] as it also helps find great family rhymes - but is a very manual process.

    - ChatGPT voice chat for object writing - mostly just because I'm more of a vocal processor - I forbid it from writing anything, and instruct it clearly to just listen and give me a list of the metaphors, imagery, and descriptive words that I tell it. I've always struggled with motivation to do object writing, but I quite enjoy doing it audibly like this.

    - ChatGPT as a proof-reader. Eg "Review the following song for me. What would new listeners think the song is about and saying". You need to be careful though, because it will often tell you stupid stuff like "the melody is great" even though you haven't shared a melody.

    - ChatGPT as a sounding board when I'm battling over a very specific phrase or wording. More as a sounding board though, as I usually don't use it's suggestions.

    - Logic Pro - The latest version lets you add chords and have it auto play some basic AI session players - which is great for fleshing out the basic ideas, and having something I can play on repeat why I write lyrics. Once I'm happy with the song, I'll then start replacing the AI tracks with human created tracks.

    [1] https://www.amazon.com.au/Complete-Rhyming-Dictionary-Clemen...

    • obeats 21 minutes ago

      For lyrics, I currently use Google Keep and hugely resent myself for it.

      What I want is to be able to write lyrics as easily as plaintext, but with manually assignment of meter, rhythm etc, while also being able to "fork" lyrics at a point and be able to work on different threads, keep track of alternative lyrics on a phrase level too. Being able to sync that up with some basic music notation (e.g. keys and percussion) would get me 90% of the way to where I want to be when it comes to writing at the computer. I think I have a coherent design for such a software in my head but am unsure if it really is what I need or is just a whimsical distraction from not writing good enough lyrics yet. Would be interested to hear if anyone's seen anything like this (can't say I've exhaustively looked).

      • dietrichepp 4 hours ago

        Currently working on an album.

        Software I use for songwriting: mostly Logic, also Dorico. Voice memos. Rhymezone sometimes. Rhymezone seems less and less helpful as I go on. I hardly use text editors for lyrics, paper seems to work a lot better. I end up with a lot of scribbles all over the paper.

        AI suggestions for songwriting seems a bit like turning on cheat codes in a game. Cheat codes will help me beat a game faster. The cost? The game is less fun, and the whole reason I play games is to have fun. Songwriting is an activity for me, like gardening or running or something like that. Or putting together a jigsaw puzzle. If you had an AI assistant that could help you put together a jigsaw puzzle, would you use it?

        There are AI tools around and some work decently well:

        - Logic has session players. I don’t think they’re AI, but they are decent at putting up the skeleton of a song.

        - AI-powered stem-splitting tools help you pick apart songs you like and figure out how they work.

        - AI-powered song mastering tools produce dubious output. I have gone through multiple iterations with AI-powered tools and ended up happier just mastering the song myself.

        LLMs seem like the great failure here.

        • kfrzcode 4 hours ago

          If you're not already aware of it, check out onelook.com

          • dietrichepp 4 hours ago

            I don’t see how this would help me, sorry. It looks kind of like a more advanced thesaurus or something. I understand why some people might like this sort of thing but it’s kind of the opposite of what I want.

            I’m not using RhymeZone less and less because RhymeZone could be better at what it does. I’m using RhymeZone less and less because the problem that RhymeZone solves is becoming less and less relevant to my process.

        • sbpayne 5 hours ago

          I have been building my own app for this recently.

          Its very early, but I have been shaping 3 songs with it already and am starting to get some friends to try it.

          I am self taught with songwriting/music so I think it might reflect my own idiosyncratic songwriting process more than anything else at the moment.

          Happy to open up a preview if anyone is interested though.

          Shoot me an email if interested (in profile)

          • Humphrey 4 hours ago

            What does the app provide? I have long considered creating an app that combines Notes with Voice Memos with a way of tracking alternative ideas for each line or section.

            • sbpayne 4 hours ago

              Basic features:

              Create projects Projects can contain notes and audio (uploaded or recorded in browser) Then theres an AI chat in the project where the docs/audio are available as context (multimodal models used)

              Its definitely very early; AI and UX need a lot of work. But definitely has helped me get over some “humps” with writing songs.

              For extra context: I write songs with acoustic guitar and vocals, but I would say they are pretty simple overall.

          • dwnw 5 hours ago

            Hardware is better at this: notebook, pencil, baseball bat.

            "AI art" is plagiarism and not an art at all.

            • latexr 5 hours ago

              > baseball bat

              Could you expand on this? How does a baseball bat help you in songwriting?

              • mattpope 4 hours ago

                I went to a Slipknot concert back in 2022. They had a "junk set", a bunch of trashcans and kegs that they hit with aluminum bats. Not completely the same, but it did have a dissonant sound!

                • SOLAR_FIELDS 3 hours ago

                  Ah yes, I remember as a kid a common joke we would make when talking about easy jobs is that we wanted to be the guy from Slipknot whose job was simply to swing a baseball bat at a trash can. No need to rehearse for that!

                • dwnw 5 hours ago

                  Sure. With rock & roll, the pencil is sometimes not large enough to rage against the machine properly and a heftier implement is necessary.

                • __d 4 hours ago

                  I’m interested in the plagiarism perspective.

                  I feel like LLMs are not too dissimilar to humans. We listen to a lifetime of music, read text, watch videos, etc. and when we come to create something all of that influences what we produce.

                  Like if you’ve listened largely to western music, and you look for a note to complete a provided two-note sequence, your choice is informed by that listening history. A non-western trained person is likely to pick a different note. Similar analogies can be made for eg English phrases, or even topics for songs.

                  There’s clearly a boundary between influenced by and copied. Is it the same for generative AI as it is for humans?

                  • dwnw 4 hours ago

                    Art is about the human experience of the artist reflected in the art. LLMs have no human experience. They just try to statistically trick you into thinking they made art through mass plagiarism of art. It's an illusion, and also rather boring/lame/uncool.

                    You can do it, sure. But you'll probably also start to wonder why nobody really wants to listen to it, and you can count me out before I do.

                    • __d 3 hours ago

                      I’m not disputing that human produced creative works have, at their best, qualities that computer generated works don’t, and maybe can’t.

                      I am however interested in the claim of plagiarism and how what generative AI does is different to what humans do. It’s not clear to me how it’s different.

                • agentultra 3 hours ago

                  I don’t use any software. Just notebook, pen, 4-track tape recorder, an SM-58, a cheap Beringer pre-amp, and some DT-770’s.

                  • scelerat 2 hours ago

                    same. to me, it's the immediacy that matters; I want as little getting in the way of getting my idea in draft form quickly. A real paper notepad and just the voice record feature of my phone are my main go-tos.

                    One of the biggest dangers of software solutions is that everything is so easy that it's super easy to just start playing with things that don't matter instead of actually working on the music itself. Sometimes keeping the tools simple helps keep the focus on the real work.

                    • davidw 3 hours ago

                      "Three cords and the truth"

                      • agentultra 2 hours ago

                        Nevada was Springsteen’s best album. Sgt Pepper’s was probably the best Beatles album (although the contention for that honour is quite high).

                        Sometimes less is more.

                    • dougb5 4 hours ago

                      Allow me to plug a dictionary/thesaurus site I've been running for decades called OneLook (https://onelook.com). Although it's not specifically aimed at songwriters, it does attract many of them as users. Over the past thirty years, I've added all sorts of brainstorming features for creative writers—like the ability to search for words by description, to match words with a given meter, and more recently to discover which colors a word might evoke or vice versa.

                      (I’m also the creator of RhymeZone so I'll plug that too! I no longer operate it, but I can pass along any feature requests you might have to its new owners.)

                      • fluxic 3 hours ago

                        Hey Doug, huge fan of yours. Thank you for everything.

                        • kfrzcode 4 hours ago

                          Huge, huge fan of the entire Datamuse stack. You have done incredible work toward building a mega-useful cognitive exploration tool, ontology and super-power for word nerds. Software and data which I would love to pay for.

                          Also OP might like https://www.onelook.com/spruce/

                          • dougb5 3 hours ago

                            Wow, thank you, that means a lot to me! And I'm stoked you found Spruce -- we added that 5 years ago, pre-LLM era, but it never got much traction.

                        • norir 3 hours ago

                          Not software, but I am a big fan of the boss 505 table top looper. It is a great tool for building up parts and I love not staring at a screen while making music. Several of my friends swear by loopy pro for similar purposes, but I like the hardware solution here better.

                          • paulmakl 3 hours ago

                            Right now I write lots of EDM. I plug in something with lots of unquantized delay on it and just make noise. I listen back to it and hear songs in the rhythms from the delay trails. That gets me started. From there I finish up in Live adding kick, bass and whatever else comes to mind.

                            You could use AI generated music this way, generate some songs and sample snippets or find interesting rhythms.

                            • decasia 5 hours ago

                              I always like writing the first verse on paper, then typing it up and maybe writing the other verses/the chorus while trying to figure out the music at the same time... I usually just write lyrics in a very simple text editor.

                              I like Rhymezone too, and the MacOS dictionary's thesaurus, as they sometimes help me think of words I don't come up with otherwise. But I feel like with songs - the good stuff always comes when you let yourself listen to your unconscious, like all the really good material and images are buried in there somewhere and you just have to trick yourself into finding them.

                              • imaginationra 3 hours ago

                                Just finishing an original full length musical- I wrote all the music and lyrics using my human brain and Reason software. The only AI tool I use is Audimee.com to convert my singing voice into 8-10 other singers for different roles + harmonies in the musical.

                                • dottjt 4 hours ago

                                  This is actually an area that I find a little frustrating.

                                  Generally to produce music you need to use a DAW. Ableton, Logic Pro etc. What sucks is you can't easily just assign a lyric to a note. Like it's just not a feature they provide.

                                  It's something you can do in MuseScore because it uses traditional notation, but it would be great to be able to do it in something like Ableton.

                                  • dwnw 4 hours ago

                                    Yes, lyrics are usually part of a traditional notation "score". Of course, Ableton is too hip to provide traditional notation with a score editor, but quite a few other popular DAWs do, including Logic:

                                    https://support.apple.com/guide/logicpro/add-lyrics-to-a-sco...

                                    • dietrichepp 4 hours ago

                                      Logic has support for adding lyrics. Create a MIDI region, select it, and press N to open the score editor. Make sure the inspector is open on the left, press I to open it if necessary. There is a block which says “part box” and inside it, LYRIC. This lets you put lyrics in the score.

                                      That said, it’s not one of the strengths of Logic to use it this way.

                                    • shw1n 4 hours ago

                                      I was just asking a producer friend today about this — does anyone know of any tools that let you “clip” parts of songs with notes?

                                      When I’m listening to music I’ll occasionally hear some element I really like and note it down via text for later

                                      Eg “synth at 1:35, really cool — be great for a cyberpunk track”

                                      I’d love to be able to hear these clips with one click (almost like Splice)

                                      Considering building for myself if something doesn’t already exist

                                      • dwnw 3 hours ago

                                        I've seen this on SoundCloud, but that was a while ago.

                                      • mattpope 4 hours ago

                                        nvim. No distractions. AI classifies as a distraction from expression (to me).

                                        • jletienne 3 hours ago

                                          Apple Notes, I used to use Microsoft Excel

                                          • bpev 4 hours ago

                                            Wrote a giant blog series with the entire process of my last album: https://bpev.me/notes/vx1

                                            I think each song develops differently, so process varies depending. But tldr on software is:

                                            Step 1. Whatever is easiest to write immediately on inspiration (which happens anytime anywhere): Voice Memos, Phone Notes app, Text Editor. I have a super long voice memo history, so my songs usually develop from 2-3+ voice memo ideas that may have been recorded years apart. I'll scroll through old ideas while songwriting to see if other cool ideas fit.

                                            Step 2. Formalize using a combination of apps that depend on what I need to be specific about. Vibes? My DAW (Ableton or Reaper). Score? Musescore. Lyrics? Text editor + maybe recording a loop in my DAW.

                                            Step 3. Usally by the end, I have a score .xml, lyrics .txt, and ableton live exports + stems.

                                            • meezyman216 5 hours ago

                                              Write my verses in google keep, record, produce, mix, and master in Studio One

                                              • 0_____0 5 hours ago

                                                notes app and paper. ableton live for recording/running VSTs but for stuff that isn't MIDI based something like Reaper works really well.

                                                • quintes 5 hours ago

                                                  GarageBand, voice memos

                                                  I only use the drummer as close to ai as it gets.

                                                  • fluxic 3 hours ago

                                                    logic.

                                                    for words: rhymezone, roget, oed, b-rhymes, fun python dictionary things :~)

                                                    • throwaway81523 4 hours ago

                                                      Um, software? Worst of all, AI? No, please no. I confess to have used an online rhyming dictionary now and then, but prefer to avoid even that.