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From arias to algorithms: Why the Royal Opera House is embracing AI – even as some musicians feel ‘miserable’ about it

INDEPENDENT·1h ago·3 min read
Photograph via Independent
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The rise of machine learning has led many artists and writers to feel that their life's work could be about to be destroyed. But at one of the world's most traditional cultural institutions, practitioners are looking at new and controversial ways of embracing AI, writes Andrew Griffin

The rise of machine learning has led many artists and writers to feel that their life's work could be about to be destroyed. But at one of the world's most traditional cultural institutions, practitioners are looking at new and controversial ways of embracing AI, writes Andrew Griffin

The rise of machine learning has led many artists and writers to feel that their life's work could be about to be destroyed. But at one of the world's most traditional cultural institutions, practitioners are looking at new and controversial ways of embracing AI, writes Andrew Griffin

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