A lot of musicians are fighting the wrong battle.
They keep asking:
“Should artists use AI?”
I think that’s the least interesting question in the entire debate.
The better question is:
“Can listeners tell when nobody cared?”
Because they usually can.
I’ve heard fully human-written songs that felt lifeless.
I’ve heard AI-assisted drafts that contained the seed of something genuinely powerful.
Neither outcome surprised me.
The public doesn’t reward process.
The public rewards connection.
Nobody leaves a song saying:
“That bridge moved me because it was written without technology.”
They leave saying:
“That song reminded me of something I lived through.”
That’s the standard.
Connection.
Not methodology.
The reason so many AI-generated lyrics fail isn’t because a machine touched them.
It’s because nobody stayed behind long enough to refine them.
Nobody challenged the obvious line.
Nobody searched for the stronger image.
Nobody asked whether the lyric felt true.
That final stage is where songs separate themselves from content.
And it’s becoming more valuable, not less.
Technology is making writing easier.
Which means taste, judgment, and refinement are becoming harder to ignore.
The creators who understand that will have a significant advantage.
Agree or disagree?