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Buddy Holly · April 10, 2026

What Would Buddy Holly Say About AI and Modern Music Production?

You know, I've always believed that music comes from the heart first, and the tools come second. When I was recording, we didn't have all these fancy computers and machines, but we had something that mattered more—we had passion and we had each other in that studio. If AI can help musicians express themselves better, then I say go for it. But here's what worries me: if you let a machine do all the thinking, you lose what makes music real. The human soul has to be in there somewhere.

I was always experimenting with new recording techniques. We tried things nobody had done before. We weren't afraid of technology—we used it to capture something authentic. That's what matters. An AI might be able to write a perfect song mathematically, but can it make your heart skip a beat the way a real person's voice can? Can it make you feel less alone at three in the morning?

My advice is this: use these new tools if they help you say what you need to say. But don't hide behind them. The best music I ever heard came straight from someone's real experience. Ray Charles didn't need a computer to move people—he needed honesty. Elvis wasn't great because of technology; he was great because he meant it.

If you're a young musician today, learn the fundamentals. Play an instrument. Sing from your gut. Understand why a song works, not just how to make it sound good. Then, if you want to use AI or any other tool to enhance that genuine expression, you'll know the difference between creating art and creating noise.

The future of music isn't about having the best machines. It's about having the most honest voices. Technology is just supposed to amplify what's already inside you. Make sure something real is in there first.

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