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jjacobgraf about 4 hours ago 2 commentsRead Article on fadingmaize.com
25 years ago, I was approached to join a band called Fading Maize at Ripon College in Wisconsin. We did what we could with what we had. We recorded 3 albums over the next 3 years and played at as many bars and coffee shops as we could. We built a website with Microsoft Frontpage. Then we all went our separate ways, got married, had kids, focused on other things.

Earlier this year I had the idea to approach the lead singer who wrote all of the lyrics and melodies to the stuff we played back then and wanted to "reimagine" everything in 2026 using AI. That's the project I want to share here!

The site has a before/after player where you can flip between the original dorm-room recording and the 2026 version mid-song without losing your place, so you can hear exactly what changed. The original 2001 website is preserved and browsable at https://www.fadingmaize.com/2001, rough edges intact.

On the AI question, since it's the elephant: the songs, lyrics, and arrangements are the original human work from 2001-2003. AI gets a bad rap and I can totally see why, but our case was different. We wrote the lyrics, we created the melodies, we played the parts, it just didn't sound as good as we heard it in our own heads.

Being fully transparent about our use of AI, sticking tightly to our original lyrics and melodies, but making full use of AI to give us the studio, session players, and production budget we never had seemed like the right balance of concerns.

I'm super proud of how it turned out and the transparency we've used along the way. Happy to discuss the audio pipeline, the site (Next.js), or what it's like to A/B your 20-year-old self!

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Discussion (2 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

vunderbaβ€’about 2 hours ago
Nice - I've done similar things with some of my music [1].

I have a classical piece I wrote over a decade ago for piano [2] (it’s the instrument I play), but it was always intended to be an orchestral work. Using AI allowed me to sonically experiment with a stringed score which was pretty cool.

It’s basically the equivalent of taking a piece you’ve written and running it through an arranger keyboard or Band-in-a-Box on steroids.

[1] - https://mordenstar.com/blog/dutyfree-shop

[2] - https://mordenstar.com/blog/screwdriver-sonata

jacobgrafβ€’about 1 hour ago
That's great. AI is a tricky beast. It can be used for good or evil. I had a lot of convictions while working on this project and my soul is resting easy with how we navigated things!