AI R&B Artist Signs Multi Million Dollar Record Deal

Beans using AI to create music and make money

Shorty who made the artist is using AI to create music and make money

:js4:

That’s still a slippery slope imo. I’m actually surprised they’re paying her because there is an end game where they eventually will use ai to replace the human altogether. And trust me, they will do it if people support it. I’m speaking from the perspective of a software engineer who’s literally in meetings with clients who are looking for ai to replace their workers. Sure it’s good for the bottom line of the business for a number of financial reasons, but bad for people who will be out of jobs. I see a future where human creativity will suffer because there are human elements & experiences that code can’t replicate…nor would I want it to. Fam I just flew in this morning from a conference where these mfs were complaining about how some ai tools they were using aren’t at a point yet where it can replace their workers. Hell, even my job isn’t safe. I had a debate with a co-worker about ai and some of the tools I’ve seen that will eventually be able to replace us engineers. He’s naive to believe that won’t happen. History has already shown us otherwise.
 
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That’s still a slippery slope imo. I’m actually surprised they’re paying her because there is an end game where they eventually will use ai to replace the human altogether. And trust me, they will do it if people support it. I’m speaking from the perspective of a software engineer who’s literally in meetings with clients who are looking for ai to replace their workers. Sure it’s good for the bottom line of the business for a number of financial reasons, but bad for people who will be out of jobs. I see a future where human creativity will suffer because there are human elements & experiences that code can’t replicate…nor would I want it to. Fam I just flew in this morning from a conference where these mfs were complaining about how some ai tools they were using aren’t at a point yet where it can replace their workers. Hell, even my job isn’t safe. I had a debate with a co-worker about ai and some of the tools I’ve seen that will eventually be able to replace us engineers. He’s naive to believe that won’t happen. History has already shown us otherwise.
Music gonna head there regardless where the actual live performers will become a novelty act

It’s technology and things will progress and we can’t stop it

I’m sure people were upset they stopped riding horses in favor of cars

Probably thought bonding with your animal while riding it everyday was a more intimate personal experience

Now we accessorize and customize cars and give them names
 
Xania Monet isn’t your typical rising R&B star. For one, she never shows her face. When label executives recently hopped on a Zoom call to talk business, she joined without video, and when they asked her to sing, she declined.

That’s not diva behavior. It’s because Xania isn’t flesh and blood. She’s an AI-crafted artist, dreamed up by Mississippi-based designer and poet Telisha “Nikki” Jones. Using the generative music platform Suno, Jones fed her poetry into the system and turned her words into full songs.

And the music industry noticed. A bidding war to sign Xania climbed as high as $3 million before Hallwood Media, led by former Interscope exec Neil Jacobson, closed a multimillion-dollar deal.

Jones, 31, runs a design studio out of Olive Branch, Mississippi. She’s been writing poetry for years, and according to her manager, Romel Murphy, about 90% of Xania’s lyrics come directly from her own life, with the rest drawn from her friends and community.


Jones grew up singing in church but admits she’s not the kind of vocalist who could have landed a record deal on her own. With Suno, she doesn’t have to be. By blending her words with AI-generated vocals, sometimes layering in live elements, she’s produced songs polished enough to chart.

And chart they did. Last week, Xania hit Billboard’s Emerging Artists list at No. 25, climbed to No. 21 on Hot Gospel Songs, and scored a No. 1 on R&B Digital Song Sales with “How Was I Supposed to Know.” In total, her catalog has racked up 9.8 million U.S. streams, with more than half (about 5.4 million) of that coming just in the last week, according to Luminate.


Of course, that kind of traction doesn’t come without baggage. Suno, the platform behind Xania’s sound, is facing lawsuits from major record labels over copyright infringement. That legal shadow explains why some big labels skipped the bidding war, though one major reportedly made a top offer before Hallwood Media won.

Still, Neil Jacobson sees the gamble as part of a larger shift. Earlier this year, his company also signed imoliver, another Suno-born act, whose breakout track “Stone” amassed millions of streams. For him, these aren’t novelties; they’re the future.

The bigger question isn’t whether AI artists can exist; clearly, they can. It’s whether they can scale into sustainable careers. Xania’s next test is a live performance. Plans are already in motion for her first show, though exactly how you translate an AI artist from the studio to the stage is still unclear.

A bigger shift in music​

For decades, the music business has thrived on scouting talent, selling authenticity, and building stars. Now, authenticity itself is being redefined. Labels are experimenting with AI creators the way they once did with autotune or hologram tours—tools that seemed strange at first but ended up reshaping what music could be.

Xania’s story shows how fast this change is moving. In less than a year, a designer-poet with no industry pedigree built an AI artist that charted on Billboard and secured a multimillion-dollar deal. As Murphy puts it: “This is real music—it’s real R&B. There’s an artist behind it.”

Whether that artist is Nikki Jones or her AI avatar Xania Monet is the existential debate. Either way, the industry seems to be paying attention.

what do she look like? she thicc?
 
I don't disagree with the notion of using AI to generate art being bad, but at the same time, when was the last time any of y'all bought an album?
 
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