AIE Creates GenAIe to Analyze Artificial Intelligence in Music

Published on January 15, 2026 | Translated from Spanish
GenAIe logo next to artificial intelligence symbols and musical notes, representing the fusion between technology and sound art.

AIE Creates GenAIe to Analyze Artificial Intelligence in Music

The Management Entity for Performing Artists or Performers (AIE) has presented a new strategic unit called GenAIe. This team is born with the mission to deeply investigate how artificial intelligence is modifying the musical landscape, from how it is composed to how creators' work is protected. Its launch coincides with the massive expansion of generative tools in studios and creative processes. 🎵

An Observatory for AI Challenges in Art

The core of GenAIe is to act as a study center that assesses both the risks and advantages introduced by AI. It is not limited to the technical; its analysis covers the legal impact on intellectual property and the economic consequences for all professionals, including performers, producers, and composers. The goal is clear: understand the transformation to be able to guide it.

Key areas that GenAIe will examine:
  • Creative processes: How AI tools alter the way music is composed, produced, and recorded.
  • Rights protection: Mechanisms to defend authorship and income of human artists against algorithmic creations.
  • Legal and economic framework: Analysis of regulatory gaps and new business models emerging with this technology.
The challenge is to balance innovation with the defense of human creators' rights, ensuring that technology complements, rather than replaces, artistic talent.

A Sector in Full Technological Evolution

The emergence of AI models that can generate realistic voices, instrumental arrangements, or complete pieces forces a rethinking of the industry's fundamentals. GenAIe aims to generate reports and practical proposals to help artists and companies adapt. This initiative recognizes a central paradox: to train an AI system, human creativity that feeds it is needed first. 🤖

Scenarios that are already reality:
  • Some musicians experiment with digital versions of themselves to create duets or impossible performances.
  • There is a well-founded fear about how these tools can affect traditional jobs in production and composition.
  • The industry needs to define new authorship and compensation criteria for works involving artificial intelligence.

The Future Between Algorithms and Artists

The creation of Gen

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