📰 Full Story
London-based singer-songwriter Samuel Smith, 49, who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2020, used generative AI tools to complete his second album, The Art of Letting Go, after the illness eroded his ability to play guitar.
For the instrumental track “Horizon” Smith hummed melodies into his phone and uploaded the recordings to AI music platforms such as Suno and Udio to generate demo arrangements.
He says the synthetic demos — produced after dozens or even hundreds of attempts and extensive editing — were never intended for the final mix but served to communicate his musical vision to session players.
The album, produced by Grammy-winner Matt Rollings, features established roots and bluegrass musicians including Jerry Douglas, Alison Brown, Stuart Duncan, Bryan Sutton, Viktor Krauss, Jonatha Brooke, Glen Phillips and a guitar duet with Julian Lage, captured during a brief studio reprieve in Smith’s symptoms.
The story joins wider industry debate: major labels sued Suno and Udio in 2024 over training data, though Universal later settled with Udio and Warner struck a deal with Suno.
Experts say AI tools can expand access for musicians with disabilities while raising copyright and ethical questions.







💬 Commentary