Latest news with #BadSeeds
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Nick Cave Says Andrew Dominik's New Video for ‘Tupelo' Has Changed His Mind on AI, Kinda
Nick Cave hasn't always held artificial intelligence in the highest regard. Back in 2023, a fan sent him a song that ChatGPT had generated 'in the style of Nick Cave,' to which the musician bluntly responded: 'The apocalypse is well on its way.' But Cave's opinion has changed somewhat after the filmmaker Andrew Dominik used AI to create a new music video for 'Tupelo' on the occasion of the song's 40th anniversary. 'As I watched Andrew's surreal little film, I felt my view of AI as an artistic device soften,' Cave wrote on his 'Red Hand Files' site in response to a fan question. 'To some extent, my mind was changed. 'It's a tool, like any other,' said Andrew.' More from Rolling Stone Nick Cave Did Not Want to Read Morrissey's 'Silly Anti-Woke Screed' for New Song Nicolas Cage Is Mistaken for Nick Cave So Often It Feels Like a Daily Occurrence Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds Level Up at Brooklyn Arena Rock Concert Cave and the Bad Seeds released 'Tupelo' as their second single in 1985 and it's been a staple of his live sets ever since. The song uses John Lee Hooker's track of the same name, about a devastating flood in Tupelo, as a jumping off point for an apocryphal tale about Elvis Presley's birth in the same Mississippi city. Dominik — who's directed such films as The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, Blonde, and Cave's documentary, One More Time With Feeling — leans into the Elvis mythos in the video. The clip takes a bunch of old still photos of the King and uses AI to animate them. Or as Dominik put it, according to Cave, 'I've taken a series of still archival images and brought them to life using AI.' Cave said he wasn't aware that Dominik was working on the project until he shared the final cut. And the musician admitted he was skeptical when the filmmaker first described video due to his previous reservations about AI. Cave stated he's still concerned about 'writers using ChatGPT and other language models to do their creative work,' as well as 'song-generating platforms that reduce music to a mere commodity, by eliminating the artistic process and its attendant struggles entirely.' Still, Cave said Dominik encouraged him to 'suspend [his] fucking prejudices and take a look.' And after watching his 'Tupelo' visual a few times, he admitted that he and his wife, Susie, were surprised at how much they liked it. '[W]e found it to be an extraordinarily profound interpretation of the song — a soulful, moving, and entirely original retelling of 'Tupelo', rich in mythos and a touching tribute to the great Elvis Presley, as well as to the song itself,' Cave wrote. 'The AI-animated photographs of Elvis had an uncanny quality, as if he had been raised from the dead, and the crucifixion-resurrection images at the end were both shocking and deeply affecting. Susie and I were blown away.' Cave ended his letter by ruminating on the importance of being able to 'change one's mind,' calling it 'the very definition of strength.' He continued, 'We pursue the truth wherever it may lead, remaining flexible and humble enough to adjust our views as new evidence emerges, regardless of how uncomfortable that may feel. It is ultimately a form of resilience, not a sign of weakness. Rigidity breaks; flexibility endures.' Best of Rolling Stone Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Nick Cave admit his view of artificial intelligence as an artistic tool has begun to shift
Nick Cave has admitted his view of artificial intelligence as an artistic tool has begun to shift. The 66-year-old singer-songwriter and frontman of The Bad Seeds has long been a vocal critic of artificial intelligence. He previously described the technology as 'unbelievably disturbing' and warned of a 'humiliating effect' on the creative industries. But he confessed his view has changed after seeing a new AI-powered video made to mark the 40th anniversary of his song Tupelo. Writing on The Red Hand Files platform , he said: 'As I watched Andrew's surreal little film, I felt my view of AI as an artistic device soften. 'To some extent, my mind was changed.' The video he was referring to was created by 56-year-old filmmaker Andrew Dominik, and used AI to animate still archival images. Tupelo is a 1985 single he has performed 'at nearly every Bad Seeds concert since it was first written'. The track depicts the mythic birth of Elvis Presley during a storm in Tupelo, Mississippi. Nick added on The Red Hand Files he was initially sceptical when he learned AI had been used to create the video that has gone with it. Filmmaker Andrew has previously collaborated with Nick on the 2016 documentary One More Time With Feeling and the 2022 film This Much I Know to Be True. Nick added in his online post he found the video 'an extraordinarily profound interpretation of the song – a soulful, moving, and entirely original retelling of Tupelo, rich in mythos and a touching tribute to the great Elvis Presley, as well as to the song itself'. He also said the AI-animated images of Elvis 'had an uncanny quality, as if he had been raised from the dead, and the crucifixion-resurrection images at the end were both shocking and deeply affecting'. In January 2023, Nick publicly condemned ChatGPT, telling fans on his blog The Red Hand Files it should 'f*** off and leave songwriting alone'. He added at the time: 'I feel sad about it, disappointed that there are smart people out there that actually think the artistic act is so mundane that it can be replicated by a machine.' Nick also received multiple fan submissions of ChatGPT-generated lyrics written 'in the style of Nick Cave' were ones he viewed as 'bulls***' and 'a grotesque mockery of what it is to be human'.


Perth Now
13 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Perth Now
Nick Cave admit his view of artificial intelligence as an artistic tool has begun to shift
Nick Cave has admitted his view of artificial intelligence as an artistic tool has begun to shift. The 66-year-old singer-songwriter and frontman of The Bad Seeds has long been a vocal critic of artificial intelligence. He previously described the technology as 'unbelievably disturbing' and warned of a 'humiliating effect' on the creative industries. But he confessed his view has changed after seeing a new AI-powered video made to mark the 40th anniversary of his song Tupelo. Writing on The Red Hand Files platform , he said: 'As I watched Andrew's surreal little film, I felt my view of AI as an artistic device soften. 'To some extent, my mind was changed.' The video he was referring to was created by 56-year-old filmmaker Andrew Dominik, and used AI to animate still archival images. Tupelo is a 1985 single he has performed 'at nearly every Bad Seeds concert since it was first written'. The track depicts the mythic birth of Elvis Presley during a storm in Tupelo, Mississippi. Nick added on The Red Hand Files he was initially sceptical when he learned AI had been used to create the video that has gone with it. Filmmaker Andrew has previously collaborated with Nick on the 2016 documentary One More Time With Feeling and the 2022 film This Much I Know to Be True. Nick added in his online post he found the video 'an extraordinarily profound interpretation of the song – a soulful, moving, and entirely original retelling of Tupelo, rich in mythos and a touching tribute to the great Elvis Presley, as well as to the song itself'. He also said the AI-animated images of Elvis 'had an uncanny quality, as if he had been raised from the dead, and the crucifixion-resurrection images at the end were both shocking and deeply affecting'. In January 2023, Nick publicly condemned ChatGPT, telling fans on his blog The Red Hand Files it should 'f*** off and leave songwriting alone'. He added at the time: 'I feel sad about it, disappointed that there are smart people out there that actually think the artistic act is so mundane that it can be replicated by a machine.' Nick also received multiple fan submissions of ChatGPT-generated lyrics written 'in the style of Nick Cave' were ones he viewed as 'bulls***' and 'a grotesque mockery of what it is to be human'.
Yahoo
17-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Rock Icon Turned Down Collaborating With Controversial Goth Singer
Rock Icon Turned Down Collaborating With Controversial Goth Singer originally appeared on Parade. Nick Cave collaborating with would have been something special back in the 1980s. Even in 2025, it would have been huge, but Cave revealed that a partnership between these two underground rock icons was not meant to be. Cave first found success in the late 1970s by leading the post-punk band The Birthday Party. In the early 1980s, Cave formed Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, incorporating darker sounds and themes into their music, making them contemporaries of the goth movement of the time. A star of that movement was Morrissey, lyricist and frontman for the gothic rock band The Smiths. And these two nearly worked together on a song. 'I've never actually met Morrissey, which is probably why I like him,' wrote Cave in a recent edition of his newsletter, The Red Hand Files. Cave acknowledged Morrissey as 'undeniably a complex and divisive figure, someone who takes more than a little pleasure in pissing people off.' But Cave considers him 'probably the best lyricist of his generation — certainly the strangest, funniest, most sophisticated, and most subtle.' Nick revealed that through 'a few pleasant email exchanges,' Morrissey asked him to sing on a new song with a 'lengthy and entirely irrelevant Greek bouzouki intro.' 'It also seemed that he didn't want me to actually sing on the song,' wrote Nick, 'but deliver, over the top of the bouzouki, an unnecessarily provocative and slightly silly anti-woke screed he had written.' 'Although I suppose I agreed with the sentiment on some level, it just wasn't my thing. I try to keep politics, cultural or otherwise, out of the music I am involved with. I find that it has a diminishing effect and is antithetical to whatever it is I am trying to achieve. So...I politely declined. I said no.' In recent decades, the 66-year-old Morrissey has drawn ire over political views and statements. In 2019, he wore a pin in support of For Britain, a far-right political party, per The Guardian. He also has a history of inflammatory remarks about race, the #MeToo movement, and more, often leaving fans feeling 'betrayed.'Rock Icon Turned Down Collaborating With Controversial Goth Singer first appeared on Parade on Jun 17, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 17, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
12-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Bruce Springsteen, the Crooner? Hear Surprising ‘Lost' Track ‘Sunday Love'
'Sunday Love,' a Bruce Springsteen ballad that's premiering today that's officially coming out as part of the Tracks II: The Lost Albums box set, finds the singer-songwriter in crooner mode. With horns and strings, the song recalls the best of Burt Bacharach and Hal David's melodramatic production, while the way his vocal performance flirts lightly with the swinging drums suggests he was interested in Jimmy Webb western pastiche while writing it. 'Each night I pray, each night I pray to God above,' Springsteen sings, 'I never had a Sunday love.' (It also sounds a little like Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds.) More from Rolling Stone See Bruce Springsteen Bring Out Paul McCartney at Liverpool Concert Eric Church: 'I Enjoy the Antagonistic' Garland Jeffreys Was One of Rock's Most Essential Voices. Where Did He Go? The song is the opening track of Twilight Hours, the 83-track box set's sixth disc, which Springsteen's label says explores 'orchestra-driven mid-century noir'; it reports that the singer-songwriter sees the record as 'romantic, lost-in-the-city songs.' He wrote the record at the same time he wrote his Western Stars album, which came out in 2019. The box set comes out June 27. The E Street Band's Max Weinberg, Patti Scialfa, and Soozie Tyrell back Springsteen up on the song. Other contributors include as producer Ron Aniello and Western Stars collaborators Kaveh Rastegar and Scott Tibbs. 'At one time it was either a double record [with Western Stars] or they were part of the same record,' Springsteen said of the song. 'I love Burt Bacharach and I love those kinds of songs and those kinds of songwriters. I took a swing at it because the chordal structures and everything are much more complicated, which was fun for me to pull off. All this stuff could have come right off of those Sixties albums.' Springsteen previously released a song 'Repo Man,' from the box set. That country-rock song appears on Somewhere North of Nashville, the album's fourth disc, which he recorded at the same time as 1995's The Ghost of Tom Joad. He also released a mariachi song, 'Adelita,' from the box set as well as the tracks 'Blind Spot,' 'Faithless,' and 'Rain in the River.' Best of Rolling Stone Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked