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Genre Report: Can the Ambient Music Boom Withstand AI?

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This analysis is part of Billboard’s music technology newsletter Machine Learnings. Sign up for Machine Learnings, and other Billboard newsletters for free here.

What is ambient? If you take genre pioneer Brian Eno’s word for it, it is music designed to be “as ignorable as it is interesting.”

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Generally, ambient music is recognized as anything from Max Richter, Jon Hopkins and Aphex Twin to wellness soundscapes and binural beats. It can be jazz inflected, like Nala Sinephro’s Continuous; it can sample folk classics, like Eno and Fred again..’s “Come On Home”; or it can double as a popular TV score, like Hildur Guonadottir’s “12 Hours Before” for HBO’s Chernobyl. It can be made up of field recordings, or sounds from a synthesizer.

Among this amorphous group of instrumentals is a corner of the music business that has worked differently than any other genre. Ambient is often enjoyed in the background for a functional purpose — like meditating, sleeping, focusing or just getting lost in the sound. This means that even the most popular artists in the genre have generally not become stars in their own right. But there is still serious money to be made — and the industry is starting to catch on.

Now, as more mainstream stars like Floating Points, André 3000, Fred Again.. and others put their spin on the genre, sleep playlists gain top audiences, and wellness culture continues to rise, this once forgotten corner of the industry is experiencing a significant boom. Could AI and new streaming policies stop the surge?

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The shift in the ambient and instrumental music business could arguably be traced back to the rise of streaming and editorial playlists. In 2016, Music Business Worldwide was the first to write that Spotify was allegedly hiring producers for a flat fee to create tracks which fit certain themes in an effort to fill out some of their, mostly instrumental, playlists. These tracks were then allegedly uploaded under pseudonyms. (Spotify denied this at the time). In January, those allegations about so-called “ghost artists” were brought to the forefront again by author Liz Pelly in her book Mood Machine: The Rise of Spotify and the Costs of the Perfect Playlist, which argued that playlists, like Ambient Chill on Spotify, had apparently been stuffed with company-owned stock music.

“Since editorial playlists formed, there’s been a very steady rise in consumption for ambient,” says Brando Hartt, client services-A&R, ambient and lo-fi, for Downtown Artist and Label Services. Streamers weren’t the only ones that noticed. In recent years, a number of new labels have emerged to capture the growing interest in ambient-related music, though they are often not like traditional labels. Many are playing what Hartt calls a “volume game,” releasing a deluge of quickly-made tracks, often bought out from the producers that created them, with the sole hope of clinching a playlist feature. Because of this approach, those label owners — two of whom, when contacted by Billboard, declined to discuss their operations — often do their work quietly. “It’s such a passive genre typically so pretty much all of your listens will come from these playlists if you get on them,” Hartt says.

In recent years, Billboard has reported that editorial playlists don’t drive streams the way they once did for mainstream genres like pop and rap — but that’s certainly not true for ambient music. The Sleep Sounds playlist on Apple Music, described as “sedate, ambient and atmospheric,” is the streamer’s No. 1 playlist on a daily basis. In fact, eight of the top 20 playlists on Apple Music are some form of ambient or wellness playlist.

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Corey Gordon knows what it’s like to see the overnight success of a sleep playlist feature. In 2020, while studying at the University of Southern California, he decided to self-release his first ambient EP, ambi tape, to streaming services. “At first, I was getting about 15 plays a day, a very casual listening base,” he says. Until one day he remembers checking Spotify For Artists to find he had “15,000 current listeners.” He struck gold — the final track on his project, “Ambi 25,” ended up on a playlist called “Deep Sleep,” earning him millions of plays on Spotify in the span of about five months. Still, he says, “the playlists I was on didn’t help cultivate any sort of audience for my music that actually stuck.”

As someone who had been following L.A.’s ambient scene long before he started making the music himself, Gordon says he noticed even more increasing interest in the genre during the pandemic. “I think it was a natural reaction to the chaos of the world — wanting some kind of meditative, sublime listening experience,” he says.

The founders of pop/R&B label Avant Garden, Azad Naficy and Brittany Crawford, also found solace in ambient and wellness music during the pandemic, spurring them to start Peace of Mind Studio in 2020. Unlike some of the other new ambient labels which were just pumping out tracks, they wanted to take a small-batch approach and give the music the respect they felt it deserved. “I thought, how do we put the same attention to detail and level of care we’ve put into our other [projects] into mood music?” says Naficy. “What was happening then wasn’t very inspiring.”

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Peace of Mind tried a novel approach, encouraging some of the artists signed to Avant Garden, like Chiiild’s Yonatan Ayal, to make ambient projects, and providing them with creative direction and marketing support as well as signing traditional ambient acts. “The pandemic was hard. At the time, everything was stopped, and this became some of [our artists’] main projects,” says Crawford. “We know so many great musicians who we felt their talent far outweighed the amount of monetary success they had. It was exciting to try these projects with people who we felt really had a solid foundation in wellness and meditation already and encourage them to write from that experience.”

Naficy and Crawford say they now have multiple signees making over half a million a year from their ambient side projects, which now help fund their other creative endeavors. But it’s not just a money grab; for Ayal, it’s just another outlet to flex his production skills. “I love this genre of music. It just goes in waves and takes you to places you can’t anticipate,” he says. “There’s something so nice about exploring that.”

The growing popularity of ambient music doesn’t just live online. It also is palpable at live shows, says Gordon. L.A. ambient stalwart Leaving Records, for example, had to move their monthly park performances to a new space after the COVID lockdown was lifted, citing growing crowds. Lo-fi/ambient label Arden Records also started beefing up their live events, including a partnership with Moto Yoga to provide live music for meditation sessions. As Arden Records co-founder Jordan Smith explains, live events like theirs are “one of the most effective ways we can build a community and brand around our artists.”

Now, marketing methods are showing signs of evolution. Flawed Mangoes, an ambient guitarist known for pioneering the subgenre “Hope Core,” is often cited as an artist who has effectively thrown out this playbook. He signed to APG over a small tastemaker label. His work regularly goes viral on TikTok accompanying video compilations of nostalgic or hopeful images (hence the name). He’s done street interviews with rap bloggers like On The Radar to reach new fans. “We had to think outside the box,” says Sam Moreland, director of marketing for APG. “We had to find a way to tie a face and identity to the instrumental.”

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“Flawed Mangoes proves you can actually build a fan base and have a whole social presence around this kind of music,” says Sagun, a producer and co-founder of Arden Records, says. “I don’t see it as just lean-back listening anymore.”

Though the business brains behind the ambient boom feel “there’s so much more that can be done in this genre,” as Naficy puts it, its growth still faces serious challenges ahead, like the rise of generative AI. Companies like Endel, which is considered to be ethically trained AI, have gained traction with products that generate ambient soundscapes to support various functions, including focus and sleep, in real time. Endel has also forged partnerships with Grimes, James Blake, 6lack and Warner Music Group to further disseminate its AI-powered sounds. Other non-wellness-focused AI music platforms like Suno and Udio, which are currently being sued by the major music companies for widespread copyright infringement, are also able to generate ambient music, especially more simplistic soundscapes, at a click of a button.

Changes to the streaming model also pose a risk. In the last few years, Lucian Grainge, the chairman/CEO of Universal Music Group, has spoken out multiple times against “functional music” or “non-music,” including bird sounds, white noise and other audio that generate billions of streams on DSPs, sometimes while listeners are asleep. Grainge would like to see it earn a lesser royalty than traditional music. “Our industry is entering a new chapter where we’re going to have to pick sides, all of us are going to have to pick sides,” he said at Billboard’s Power 100 event in 2023 ”Are we on the side of…functional music, functional content? Or are we on the side of artistry and artists?”

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With ambient, which is a wide-ranging and experimental genre, it’s hard to draw a line between where noise ends and music begins. “I hate that stance,” says Smith. “We’ve done a lot of nature stuff, including a project with the National Parks, where we’ve released nature sounds. Our artists will go on a hike and field record it. They’ve spent time, effort and energy into that. They shouldn’t be penalized because it’s a different way of listening.”

Companies like Arden, Peace of Mind and other newcomers will not be deterred. Arden Records is now opening a publishing side of its business to capture the untapped songwriter market in lo-fi and ambient, and Peace of Mind continues to sign new talent and dream of a future when the genre goes truly mainstream.

“In 10 years, if we keep going on the path we are on, there’s going to be a stage at Coachella for ambient,” Naficy says. “Can you imagine how great that would be?”

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Tim Dillon Fired From Riyadh Comedy Festival for Saudi Slavery Remarks: ‘They Didn’t Like That’

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Tim Dillon will not be traveling to the Riyadh Comedy Festival next month. The California comedian and host of The Tim Dillon Show podcast says he was fired from the Oct. 8 Saudi Arabia festival for comments he made about the country on Joe Rogan‘s podcast.

Besides losing a $375,000 payday (an amount Dillon confirmed to Rogan), he also lost a nearby warm-up gig in Dubai two nights before his Riyadh appearance after mixing up the Arab emirate with Abu Dhabi (the rival cities are both part of the United Arab Emirates).

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“I mixed them up — apparently this is a big deal over there. This is a real problem,” he said on a recent episode of his podcast. “This is not a malicious slander. It’s a mistake.”

The Riyadh Comedy Festival — which mostly takes place at the Bakr Al-Sheddi Theatre and ANB Arena from Sept. 25 to Oct. 9, features a number of top tier comedians including Dave Chappelle, Bill Burr, Gabriel Iglesias, Aziz Ansari, Kevin Hart, Jeff Ross, Chris Distefano, Tom Segura, Jo Koy, Sam Morril, Hannibal Buress, Andrew Schultz, Sebastian Maniscalco, Whitney Cummings, Jimmy Carr, Louis CK, Pete Davidson, Russell Peters and Chris Tucker.

“Supposedly, MBS is a fan of mine,” Dillon said two weeks ago on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast, referring to Saudi head of state Mohammed Bin Salman.

Dillon was reportedly fired from the festival for claiming that Saudi Arabia relies on slave labor — a controversial take on the country’s foreign laborers laws that some groups, including Human Rights Watch, have criticized as “slavery-like.” Legally, slavery was abolished in the Kingdom in the 1960s.

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Dillon said the slavery jokes were a misunderstanding with his Saudi hosts, saying on his podcast, “I was defending them for having slaves. I literally said, ‘Slaves are hard workers and for the most part agreeable.’ But they didn’t like that.”

“You can literally support somebody too much,” he added. “In life, this happens. Too many compliments; too much support — and then they turn on you.”

He clarified his comments further, noting, “If i was a slave — not that I want to be one, but if I was and I built this really nice thing, I might say to my slave children, ‘Daddy built that,'” concluding, “Apparently this got to the people in Saudi Arabia and they were unhappy about it.”

The Riyadh Comedy Festival opens Sept. 25 with performances by Burr, Maz Jobrani and Andrew Santino and Bobby Lee from the Bad Friends podcast. More here.

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Wilson Phillips, Kenny Loggins & More to Perform at Charity Concert Honoring Brian Wilson & The Beach Boys

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Wilson Phillips, Kenny Loggins, David Pack of Ambrosia and more are set to perform at a charity concert celebrating the music of Brian Wilson and The Beach Boys on Saturday, Sept. 27 at the Granada Theatre in Santa Barbara.

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Wilson Phillips features two of Wilson’s daughters, Carnie and Wendy Wilson, as well as Chynna Phillips, the daughter of John and Michelle Phillips. The concert will also feature Brian Wilson’s grandchildren, so it will spotlight three generations of the Wilson family.

The concert, dubbed An All-Star Tribute to the Music of Brian Wilson & Songs of The Beach Boys, will feature the Folk Orchestra of Santa Barbara. Other guest performers are expected to include The Honeys; former members of The Beach Boys and the Brian Wilson Band; and keyboardist Don Randi (The Wrecking Crew); with appearances by Rosemary Butler (Jackson Browne), Ken Stacey (Elton John), Hunter Hawkins (Kenny Loggins), Carly Smithson (American Idol), Alisan Porter (The Voice) and poet Stephen J. Kalinich. These acts will be backed by The Tribe Band, who will perform an array of Beach Boys favorites.

The show begins at 7:30 p.m. Here’s a link for tickets. VIP packages are also available.

Proceeds will be donated to Adam’s Angels, a local group of volunteers, and the Surfrider Foundation of Santa Barbara, dedicated to the protection and enjoyment of the world’s oceans and beaches.

Brian Wilson died on June 11 at age 82. He was the third member of the fabled group to pass, following brothers Dennis in 1983 at age 39 and Carl in 1998 at age 51.

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AI Artist Xania Monet, Diddy Sentencing Looms, Ticketmaster Lawsuit & More Music Law News

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THE BIG STORY: If you needed another clear sign that artificial intelligence is seeping into every aspect of American cultural life, here’s one: An AI artist just signed a record deal, the hallowed milestone of success for any emerging musician.

As first reported by Billboard last week, Xania Monet — the avatar of a woman named Telisha Jones who writes her own lyrics but uses Suno to create the music — inked a record contract worth millions. The deal has quickly become the talk of the industry, including from stars who have spoken out, including Kehlani, who said: “I don’t respect it.”

But…what exactly is a label buying here? It remains unclear the extent to which you can secure intellectual property rights to AI-generated songs, raising hurdles for monetizing them. And platforms like Suno are still facing trillion-dollar infringement lawsuits that essentially claim the technology itself is illegal. For more, go read our full story.

You’re reading The Legal Beat, a weekly newsletter about music law from Billboard Pro, offering you a one-stop cheat sheet of big new cases, important rulings and all the fun stuff in between. To get the newsletter in your inbox every Tuesday, go subscribe here.

Other top stories this week…

BLIGE CASE TOSSED – A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit against Universal Music Group claiming Mary J. Blige’s enduring 1992 hit “Real Love” infringed the oft-sampled 1973 funk song “Impeach the President” by the Honey Drippers, which has been used by Run-DMC, Dr. Dre, Doja Cat and many others over the years. The judge said the two songs were so different that nobody would hear the earlier song: “The songs do not sound the same.”

DIDDY SENTENCING – Attorneys for Sean “Diddy” Combs urged a federal judge to sentence him to just 14 months in prison on his prostitution convictions, asking him to reject the kind of “draconian” punishment sought by prosecutors. Because the star has already served 13 months in jail since he was arrested, that sentence would see him released almost immediately: “It is time for Mr. Combs to go home.”

LETTERS OF SUPPORT – To help make that argument, Diddy’s lawyers filed dozens of letters from supporters, pleading with the judge to show lenience toward the rapper when he sentences him next month. They came from Diddy’s mother and kids, from ex-girlfriend Yung Miami and from an executive at hip-hop label Quality Control Music — among many others.

SUNO SUIT 2.0 – Separate from the Xania Monet situation, the major record labels filed an amended version of their copyright lawsuit against the AI music firm, adding new allegations that the company illegally “stream-ripped” songs from YouTube to train its models. That’s a hugely important new claim: In a separate such lawsuit against Anthropic, a federal judge ruled this summer that AI training itself is likely a legal “fair use” but that using pirated works to do it could lead to many billions in potential damages.

FTC, YEAH YOU KNOW ME – The Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuit against Live Nation and Ticketmaster accusing the concert giants of advertising misleading ticket prices and allowing scalpers to buy up tickets and resell them at inflated prices. The case came months after the agency sued a ticket broker that allegedly used thousands of fake Ticketmaster accounts to buy and resell tickets to Taylor Swift concerts and other events — and two years after Live Nation was hit with a sweeping monopoly lawsuit by the U.S. Department of Justice.

HYPE VID SETTLEMENT – Mike Tyson settled a lawsuit claiming he illegally used the Jay-Z, DMX and Ja Rule song “Murdergram” in an Instagram video promoting his boxing match against Jake Paul. The case was filed by Ty Fyffe, a producer and co-writer of the 1998 track who claimed that Tyson had willfully infringed his copyrights by using the song in a training video ahead of his much-hyped fight with Paul.

LOSE YOUR … CASE? – Meta urged a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit from Eight Mile Style, a music publisher that owns hundreds of Eminem songs, which claims the social media giant made “Lose Yourself” and other iconic tracks available to billions of users. In the motion, Facebook’s lawyers argued the case was “remarkably short on specifics” about actual infringing material: “Fanciful estimates are not a substitute for well-pleaded facts,” the company wrote.

NEVER MEANT TO CAUSE YOU ANY PAIN – The Prince estate asked a judge to dismiss a lawsuit by the late singer’s Purple Rain co-star Apollonia (Patty Kotero) that claims the estate is trying to “steal” her name, arguing it has no intention of forcing her to change her name — and has repeatedly told her as much. The filing did say, however, that Apollonia secured her own trademarks during “the chaotic period following Prince’s death.”

SEX TAPE LEAK CASE – Colombian pop star Beéle was hit with a lawsuit alleging invasion of privacy and sexual cyberharassment from ex-girlfriend Isabella Ladera, claiming he is responsible for leaking their sex tape. Beéle’s reps have denied that he was the source of the leak and said the singer is “also a victim,” but Ladera’s lawsuit placed the blame squarely on him: “Only two people had the videos, and Ladera had already erased them almost a year and a half before.”

MEGAN THEE PLAINTIFF – Lawyers for Megan Thee Stallion argued in court filings that the social media personality DJ Akademiks must reveal whether Tory Lanez sent him a confidential DNA testing report during the singer’s criminal case. The filings came amid discovery in a defamation case against Milagro Gramz, a gossip blogger and ardent online defender of Lanez.

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