My artistic approach
Generative AI in music is simply creating a new style. In the 1970s and 1980s, synthesizers transformed musical creation: they invented sounds by modulating frequencies. Today, AI does something similar. It creates sounds like a synthesizer; it generates lyrics like a synthesizer. Since the voice is also a sound, a modulation of frequencies, AI becomes an instrument in its own right. A tool, nothing more and nothing less. Just as it once became easier to move from the harpsichord to the piano, and then from the piano to the synthesizer.
So yes, my songs are generated with AI. But there is always a human source of writing. The words come from me, from my life, from my emotions. And even from my lack of knowledge of instruments and music theory, something intimate and authentic is born.
I have a deep conviction — and others before me, such as Leonard Bernstein, have argued it — that music always follows the language of the artist who composes it. In the case of generative AI, the words already carry a melody, and the way they follow one another creates music: sometimes fluid, sometimes dissonant. In both cases, it is possible to vary the composition, to enrich or simplify the melody.
My writing process is not calculated. The texts come out of me because they have to come out. And in the way they emerge, a rhythm takes shape, a musical identity is created. AI decodes and interprets this identity in an almost magical way. And every time, I am still impressed.
In my works, the ideas and the lyrics express an intimate part of who I am. I always begin with a subject, a concept, and I try to bring it into song. One goal: to find the universal. A song that will speak to everyone, but differently to each person, through the power of words and melody.
Some songs are written for women. I try to step into their world, to feel their lived experience. It is a difficult exercise, but a precious one. If, at times, I have managed to touch even a fragment of their truth, then the effort was worth it.
But I am not alone in this journey. Not all the songs were written 100% by myself. Some were co-inspired, some co-written. Thank you to those who helped me and who will recognize themselves. Your contribution has enriched this creative journey and given it even greater depth.
I am not a virtuoso musician. Give me a guitar or a keyboard, and I will not perform any technical miracle. But since childhood, music has been a language I know intimately. I love beautiful melodies. That is my style. I love music when it moves you deep in the gut and draws out your very essence. And if SUNO were to disappear tomorrow, of course I would no longer be able to produce songs as I do today. But I would still write, as I always have, and as you may have read in my posts. Writing will remain my path, my inner voice.
Writing these texts stirred many emotions in me. Sometimes joy, sometimes pain. But always with the feeling that something true was passing through, even if it is only a reflection of what others may have lived and shared.
I hope you will find a great deal of emotion in listening to these pieces. Your feedback means a lot to me: I learn by doing. This third album aspires to a calmer, more accomplished atmosphere. Thank you for welcoming it with kindness.
And then, in all humility: these are only a few songs. A moment in life, an invitation to travel. Just a sincere and simple invitation to share a little music and emotion.