Why is music so much easier for AI than code?
2 points
3 hours ago
| 5 comments
| HN
Guys I made this song on Suno ai and it is literally, to me, more beautiful than any song I have ever heard in my life, ever.

But I still feel that I am a better coder than even the best models. (As of gpt 5.4)

It seems that music is so hard, why is it ai has already surpassed us there but not in code? Seems that code is easier.

https://suno.com/s/ZpeRr0nngDrlef5D

speedgoose
31 minutes ago
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Popular music follows well known recipes.

Pick a scale and a tuning, a rythme signature, some chords and a progression , some random melodic pattern, a set of instruments that fit the target genre, and it will sound okay.

Now, it’s much harder to make original and musically interesting music.

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Gooblebrai
1 hour ago
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> It seems that music is so hard, why is it ai has already surpassed us there but not in code? Seems that code is easier.

I note by this that you don't seem to have experience in music? Because in that case, you are not equipped to judge the quality of the song at some levels beyond a listen.

The same way that someone not technical can't judge the code output of the LLM and will just be impressed by the functional output (i.e. is the site working)

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gangstaai
1 hour ago
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Not certain but being a programmer and a musician i can guess. Theres certain trends about a pop song, tempo, drama, layering, effects, they can mimic hits, use predictable verse/chorus/verse/chorus/tag, etc. I think AI is great at code as well, completely runs circles around me in many domains.
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worldsavior
22 minutes ago
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Bot post.
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measurablefunc
3 hours ago
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I recommend you look into Gell-Mann amnesia.
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ben_w
2 hours ago
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Or Dunning Kruger.

I like messing around with Suno, but I know I don't have much musical taste, yet even so when I try to push it to be even a little weird it fails utterly: a call for "one minute" of animal noises is rendered as 90 seconds of electric guitar; asking for every verse to be in a different accent from around the world is rendered as *at best* two, but usually one; asking for one specific British regional accent often comes up American, and when it actually is British it's one of two specific accents that's either "posh person trying to be middle class" or "posh person trying to be working class".

I was mostly happy to turn out a meme version of the recent SoftBank slides as a parodic James Bond theme, but even then, no goose honk noise.

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