Every time a new creative technology appears — the printing press, the camera, the electric guitar, Photoshop — people worry it will kill creativity. It never does. Instead, it changes what creativity looks like, who can participate in it, and what becomes possible.
AI is the latest chapter in that story. And like every chapter before it, the loudest question being asked is the wrong one. The question isn't "will AI replace artists?" The better question is: what can artists do with AI that they couldn't do before?
Tools like Suno and Udio can generate full songs — with vocals, instrumentation, and lyrics — from a text prompt in seconds. AIVA (Artificial Intelligence Virtual Artist) has been composing classical and cinematic music since 2016 and is officially recognised as a composer by the French music rights organisation SACEM.
What does this mean for musicians?
AI music generation is extraordinarily good at combining existing musical patterns. It cannot:
The musicians who will thrive are those who use AI to handle the mechanical parts of production while investing their own emotional intelligence in the creative direction.
Midjourney, DALL-E 3, and Stable Diffusion can generate photorealistic images, paintings, illustrations, and concept art from natural language descriptions. A prompt like "a bioluminescent forest at dusk, watercolour style, high detail" produces a stunning image in seconds.
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This has transformed several industries:
Here's what's interesting: the hardest part of working with AI image tools isn't generating images — it's selecting the right one. Out of 50 variations, which one has the right mood? Which composition tells the story best? Which colour palette fits the brand?
That judgment — taste, curation, and aesthetic intent — is entirely human. And it turns out, it's also the most valuable part of the creative process.
AI writing assistants — from ChatGPT to Claude to Gemini — can draft emails, write code, summarise documents, suggest headlines, and generate entire article outlines. For writers, they serve as:
What AI writing cannot do is replace the writer's point of view. The best writing is distinctive — it reflects a particular way of seeing the world, a specific voice honed over years. AI writing is competent but generic unless directed by a human with something specific to say.
The writers thriving with AI are those who treat it like a very fast, very literal assistant: they provide the vision, the argument, the perspective — and let AI handle the scaffolding.
AI is already embedded in Hollywood:
The Directors Guild, Writers Guild, and actors' unions have all had contentious debates about AI use — but the consensus emerging in most contracts is that AI as a tool directed by human creatives is acceptable; replacing human creatives wholesale is not.
The most compelling argument for AI as a creative partner is what researchers call the augmentation thesis: AI doesn't replace human creativity, it removes the barriers that prevented people from expressing it.
Consider:
AI democratises creative production. The skills that become more valuable as a result are the ones AI cannot replicate: vision, taste, judgment, emotional authenticity, and the ability to connect with other humans through art.
The fear that AI will replace artists assumes that the output — the painting, the song, the story — is what matters. But for most meaningful art, the human intention and experience behind it is the point. A photograph of a sunset is not the same as Ansel Adams standing in Yosemite at dawn, choosing his moment.
What is the 'augmentation thesis' in relation to AI and creativity?