Aimi's app for listening to AI-generated beats arrives on Android and iOS
Following a beta that saw just 5,000 people get a chance to use the software, Aimi's iOS and Android app is now available to all. The release brings the company's generative music platform to mobile, where it was not available previously. Engadget's James Trew has been using the app since January. Since then, Aimi has made a few user interface tweaks.
What hasn't changed is the premise of the app. As before, Aimi is built around continuous music experiences" you can subtly tweak by interacting with a handful of interface elements. If you're familiar with platforms like Endel and Brain.fm, you probably know what you're getting into. As a free user, you can tap the thumbs-up and down buttons to guide Aimi's algorithm. There's also a shuffle button if a section comes on that you don't like at all. With today's release, Aimi will also prompt you to indicate if you want to hear a section more or less frequently, as well as for longer or shorter periods of time.
Users who pay $10 per month gain access to additional controls. First, a Section" view allows you to isolate individual elements of a musical composition, including parts like the harmony and melody, and adjust the gain and tell Aimi whether you like what you're hearing. An additional Composition" interface allows you to shape what you're hearing by adjusting a set of four sliders. For instance, by moving the Progression" slider, you can instruct Aimi to modify the experience you're listening to more or less often. Meanwhile, the Intensity" and Texture" sliders allow you to control the number of effects Aimi employs and whether a composition sounds organic or synthetic. Last but not least, there's a self-explanatory Vocals slider.
The release of a mobile app is part of a broader plan by Aimi to bring more people into the world of generative music. Later this year, the company plans to release Aimi Studio, which will allow users to take a more hands-on approach to craft their own compositions. One of the strengths of generative music is that we can use it to attract casual listeners with continuous music experiences and then introduce them to interactive music by letting them take ownership of their music experience," Aimi CEO Edward Balassanian told Engadget at the start of the year.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/aimis-app-for-listening-to-ai-generated-beats-arrives-on-android-and-ios-150035919.html?src=rss