AI Music Revolution
The AI music industry is moving faster than most artists can react. Platforms launch overnight. Terms change quietly. Laws lag behind reality. And everyone argues about whether this is "real" music — while the future gets built without them.
AI Music Revolution cuts through the noise.
Hosted by Josh Gilliland — 30-year Big Tech veteran, 5-star Submithub curator, 200+ track producer, and author of The AI Music Revolution — this weekly briefing is for creators who want to operate like professionals, not hobbyists.
What to expect:
• Market Intel — The truth about Suno, Udio, Bandcamp, and the major moves shaping this space (without the PR spin)
• The Lab — Prompt engineering, DAW mixing, mastering workflows, and professional release standards
• Distribution & Marketing — How to pass the curator test, get playlisted, and actually monetize your catalog
• The Philosophy — Authenticity, authorship, and the hard questions about creativity in the AI era
• Legal Reality Checks — What you own, what you don't, and how to protect your work
This is not a hype show. This is not a "press a button and get famous" fantasy.
It's a tactical briefing for the AI music era.
Join the Revolution. New briefings every week.
Books & resources: jgbeatslab.com
AI Music Revolution
Latest Episodes
The Disclosure Discipline for AI Assisted Music
DistroKid quietly added a mandatory AI disclosure question to every upload. Three categories require disclosure: AI-generated lyrics, AI-generated music, AI-generated audio. Three categories are exempt: pitch correction and auto-tune, AI mixing...
The Tools Aren't The Problem
The owner of an AI music education company just cut $5,000 from his own subscription stack without losing a single capability he uses. That's where this episode opens. Josh walks through the audit, the pattern most creators fall into, and the m...
Why a 30-Year Electronic Music Veteran Went All-In on AI: Inge Nilsen, Red Lab Conversations
Inge Nilsen got his first DJ mixer at age 12. He organized his first techno party in Oslo in 1991, before electronic music had even splintered into the genres we know today. He grew his concepts to fill the biggest venues in Oslo with 10,000 pe...
The Suno Stack: Why You're Reaching for the Prompt When the Problem is Three Layers Below
Most creators using Suno are stuck in the same loop. The generation comes back wrong. They rewrite the prompt. They generate again. Six rerolls later, frustrated and out of credits, they have nothing usable.The instinct is always to fix ...
The Window Is Still Open. But It Won't Be Forever.
Most people watching AI music from the sidelines are waiting for something — for the tools to be perfect, for the legal questions to settle, for some signal that says it's safe to start. The signal is not coming. And by the time it does, the wi...