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YouTube will now automatically detect and label AI videos – even when creators don’t disclose it
YouTube will now automatically apply AI content labels to realistic AI-generated videos on its platform – even when creators have not disclosed the use of AI themselves.  For music, the implications are pointed: the prominent label will apply to photorealistic AI music videos but not to stylized or animated ones, creating an implicit incentive for artists experimenting with AI visuals to favor the latter.  The platform said it is rolling out “new internal signals” to identify AI-generated content, starting in May 2026.  If a creator does not specify whether AI was used, but YouTube‘s systems detect “significant photorealistic AI use,” the platform said it will “automatically apply a label.”  The announcement follows a recent expansion of YouTube’s AI likeness detection tool to all eligible creators aged 18 and over. The tool, which the company has compared to Content ID, scans for AI-generated content featuring creators’ likenesses.

 

UMG and Sony seek to add over 61k recordings to Suno lawsuit after discovery reveals AI trained on ‘millions’ of their copyrighted tracks
Universal Music Group and Sony Music Entertainment have asked a federal court for permission to add more than 61,000 copyrighted sound recordings to their copyright infringement lawsuit against AI music generator Suno.  The motion, filed on Thursday (May 21) in the US District Court for the District of Massachusetts, which you can read here, comes after the record companies used audio fingerprinting technology to identify their recordings within Suno’s training data.  The original complaint, filed in June 2024, asserted 560 copyrighted works.  Judge F. Dennis Saylor IV, who is presiding over the case, would need to grant the motion before the additional works are added to the lawsuit. The labels say they are asserting “only a small fraction” of those recordings, 61,026 works, in the proposed second amended complaint.  In its original answer to the complaint, Suno admitted that “the tens of millions of recordings that Suno’s model was trained on presumably included recordings whose rights are owned by the Plaintiffs in this case.”

Music Licensing Enforcement Tightens
It’s likely that many small U.S. fitness operators still play music that’s not licensed for commercial use, assuming their risk of getting caught is low…. Ever since operetta composer Victor Herbert sued Shanley’s restaurant in New York in 1917 to force it to pay for playing his song on a player-piano, songwriters and music publishers have depended on Performing Rights Organizations to make sure they get compensated. For much of the last century, three organizations dominated the industry, a relatively staid and unglamorous corner of the music scene that remained largely unchanged throughout the eras of radio, records and CDs. But the rise of streaming has led to a surge in revenue and spawned a handful of new organizations looking to cash in.  Now there are at least half a dozen PROs in the United States, representing songwriters and publishers, each demanding that bars, restaurants, hotels and other venues pay a fee or risk being sued. Businesses say the rising licensing costs have become overwhelming, and some question whether it’s even worth playing music at all. The House Judiciary Committee last fall asked the Copyright Office to investigate the current system and consider potential reforms. In February, the Office opened an inquiry and received thousands of comments from businesses and songwriters. Creating a welcoming ambiance in a restaurant or yoga studio isn’t as simple as putting on a Spotify playlist. Streaming has unleashed trillions of songs, and every one must be licensed and have royalties paid to the songwriter whenever any track is played in public. Violations can cost up to $150,000 per infringement.  

 

Music Industry backs US bill to outlaw AI deepfakes, in growing coalition
A bipartisan group of US lawmakers has reintroduced the NO FAKES Act – the bill designed to protect individuals from unauthorized AI-generated deepfakes of their voice and likeness.  The Nurture Originals, Foster Art, and Keep Entertainment Safe Act of 2026 was reintroduced in both the US House of Representatives and the Senate on Wednesday (May 20).  The bill has attracted a coalition of support from across the music industry, including from Universal Music Group, Sony Music, Warner Music Group, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), the Recording Academy, and the National Music Publishers Association (NMPA). This marks the third time the bill has been brought before Congress – it was first formally introduced in the Senate in July 2024, and reintroduced in April 2025 – but it failed to advance out of committee on both occasions.The updated NO FAKES Act has been specifically revised to account for platforms like Spotify – distinguishing between user-generated content platforms and more curated services, and tailoring how disputes are processed and enforced accordingly.

 

Understanding production agreements in the music industry
“The music industry isn’t simple, and artists often lean on strategic partnerships to move their careers forward,” note Izgi and Bromley (pictured L-R, inset). “One of the most common is the production agreement, which influences not just how music gets made, but who really benefits from it. This article breaks down how production agreements work, why artists sign them, and where things can go wrong…” A production agreement is a contract between an artist and a production company, where the production company helps develop the artist’s career by providing resources such as recording facilities, management guidance, and industry connections. In exchange, the production company usually receives a share of the artist’s earnings and/or certain rights in connection with an artist’s music. Conceptually, the structure is like having a manager also act as the artist’s label, and sometimes, publisher. Production agreements can help artists get off the ground, opening doors to industry connections, money and creative support.  But they usually come with strings attached. 

 

DistroKid Is Now Asking Creators If Their Music Is AI-Generated as ‘Self-Disclosure’ Strategy Moves Out of Beta


As Spotify tests AI credit labels in a beta rollout, DistroKid is now asking creators to disclose what parts, if any, of their tracks are AI-assisted.  Last month, Spotify launched a beta test alongside DistroKid of a new feature that exposes artificial intelligence assistance within track credits, part of a major step towards platform-level transparency. Now, DistroKid has broadly launched its own process for creators to disclose whether their music was AI-assisted, and to what extent. One important note about both sides of this launch is that it relies on creators self-reporting their AI usage—something bad actors will be less inclined to do. Unlike Deezer, where AI-assisted music is automatically tagged, DistroKid (and Spotify) provides users with a tool to disclose what, if any, aspects of their track were AI-generated or assisted.  That means that the absence of an AI credit does not necessarily confirm that AI tools were not used in the creation process, though both Distrokid and Spotify could modify their approaches down the line. At the end of the day, some action taken is better than none at all, but it will undoubtedly require more than asking users to be honest about their AI use to provide a blanket solution across DSPs.

 

5 Ways to Avoid Mistakes Before You Demo Your Songs
The professional demo recording process is a necessary part of the equation for songwriters aspiring to get their material heard by music industry decision-makers and, hopefully, cut by successful recording artists. Despite the fact that hundreds of demos are recorded every week in places like Nashville, New York and Los Angeles, new songwriters often find themselves overwhelmed and a bit intimidated by the prospect of getting their songs professionally demoed and ready for prime time. By highlighting some of the mistakes I’ve encountered in my years of recording songwriter demos, I can hopefully help you avoid some of the pitfalls that result in either overly expensive or ineffective recordings.  1) Be Sure Your Song is Finished. 

2) Make a Rough Recording. 3) Understand That Demos Don’t Fix What Isn’t Working in Your Song. 4) Don’t Try to Save Money by Recording/Playing on The Demo Yourself (Unless You’re a Studio Pro). 5) Only Record a Full-Band Demo if You Have a Very Good Reason.   If you can remember the above tips as you’re getting ready to demo your song, you’ll be certain to remove a good deal of angst from the process. It’s always a little stressful getting ready to put your money where your mouth is and the better the decisions you make in advance, the more able you’ll be to enjoy the recording process and get great versions of your songs out into the world.

 

Texas Music Revolution Fest Reveals 2026 Lineup, New Documentary
2026 will mark 30 years of the Texas Music Revolution Fest in McKinney, TX, hosted by radio station 95.3 KHYI in Dallas that shirks the same tired pop country format that has infected the airwaves coast to coast to focus on Texas music, bluegrass, and and just about everything else that’s great. Also as part of this year’s festival, they’ve announced the release of the “Texas Music Revolution” documentary that chronicles the 25th anniversary of the festival that took place in 2021 right after the pandemic. Directed by filmmaker Troy Paff (Emmy-nominated cinematographer for Dirty Jobs), and featuring Kiefer Sutherland, the documentary showcases some of the biggest names in Texas music like Charley Crockett, Ray Willie Hubbard, Joshua Ray Walker, and Zane Williams. The full film is planned to be available for streaming around the time of the 2026 festival. For tickets to the 2026 festival and more information, visit tmrfest.com. 

 

‘They Called Us Outlaws’ charts how Texas artists heralded a new movement in country music

Fifty years ago, an album came out with a title and a lineup of artists that seemed calculated to capture and capitalize on a moment. They were country artists, giving a kind of musical middle finger to the polished Nashville scene.  On the cover of the album were the faces of Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Jessi Colter and Tompall Glaser. Printed in western typeface across the top: “Wanted!“  While the album would go down as the first in country music history to go platinum, selling one million copies, it was in a sense just a sampler of a much bigger musical movement behind it — centered mostly in and around Austin, a community of like-minded musicians who refused to play by the industry’s rules.  A new docuseries, “They Called Us Outlaws,” chronicles the birth of the outlaw country genre. It premiered last month at South by Southwest with sold-out crowd. Filmmaker Eric Geadelmann joined the Standard to talk about the project. Listen to the interview in the player above or read the transcript here.  This transcript has been edited lightly for clarity:

 

The Music Industry Has a Growing Data Overload Problem. 
The music industry of 2026 is exploding everywhere all-at-once, with catalog investments, creative outputs, and AI-generated mayhem part of a pedal-to-the-metal growth expansion. On the ground, that means more companies are battling an avalanche of data overload and disconnected processes, though systems and experts are quickly adapting and figuring out solutions. What’s the path towards achieving ‘data nirvana'? The answer to that question could start to differentiate winners and losers across a number of exploding industry sub-categories in the coming years, including distributors, DSPs, ticketing platforms, ISP/catalog mega-owners, DAWs, publishers, and labels. Click here to read the full article.

 


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