Budget Cover Art Without AI: Why Independent Artists Need More Soul Than Software
There is something painfully bleak about watching a new single, EP, or album drop with an AI image plastered across it. On principle, some people will refuse to press play; many more will already be sceptical about you, because as soon as a lot of people see an AI image attached to a release, they instantly get the ick, and the impression that the artist has been too lazy or too creatively vacant to find a fitting way of visualising what the music reflects. That might sound brutal, but visual identity matters. It’s like walking into a house for the first time; if your hallway is a grotty affront to the senses, the rest of your home has to pull some serious weight to even give you a shot at making a good impression; a lot of people will just turn around and leave, and that’s just one of the reasons why you shouldn’t base your artwork on something scraped together by a machine trained on other people’s labour. Independent artists already face a savage attention economy. Every release has to fight through algorithmic sludge, bored scrolling, disposable playlists, half-read captions, and the endless grey noise of digital culture. Your […]
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