AI music generation helps musician with Parkinson's complete album after losing guitar skills

Reviewed byNidhi Govil

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London-based singer-songwriter Samuel Smith turned to AI-powered music generators like Suno and Udio to finish his second album after Parkinson's disease took away his ability to play guitar. By humming melodies into his phone, Smith created demo arrangements that communicated his vision to session players, highlighting how AI-assisted music tools can empower artists with disabilities to maintain creative expression despite physical limitations.

Samuel Smith Uses AI Music Generation to Continue Creating Music

When Parkinson's disease robbed London-based musician Samuel Smith of his guitar-playing ability, he faced a stark choice: abandon his creative expression or find a new path forward. The 49-year-old singer-songwriter chose the latter, turning to AI-powered music generators to complete his second album, The Art of Letting Go

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. Diagnosed with the progressive neurological disorder in 2020, Smith spent over a year working on the eight-track album, during which tremors, stiffness, and fatigue steadily deteriorated his guitar skills. For the instrumental piece "Horizon," he relied on platforms like Suno and Udio to create demo arrangements that would convey his musical vision to the session players who ultimately recorded the song

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Source: AP

Source: AP

Smith's approach involved humming rough melodies into his phone and uploading the recordings into AI music generators, which analyze patterns in melody, harmony, and rhythm based on large datasets of recorded music and audio. He then provided prompts describing instrumentation, mood, and style. The process was far from instantaneous—producing convincing demos from the synthetic tracks often required "50, 100, 150 attempts" and extensive editing "to get something that sounds close to my music," Smith explained

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. These AI-generated demos weren't mixed into the final studio version but served as a communication bridge to session players, demonstrating what he envisioned.

How AI-Assisted Music Tools Empower Artists with Disabilities

Smith's story illustrates a less-discussed dimension of generative AI in the music industry: its potential to empower artists with disabilities facing physical limitations. "AI is not replacing anything for me," Smith emphasized. "It's unlocking, it's enabling. It's allowing me to keep writing. I upload my lyrics; AI doesn't create my lyrics. I upload my music; AI does not create my music"

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. The technology brought his ideas to life in a way he could share with musicians, saying, "Here, that's what I'm thinking, that is what I'm hearing."

Ruaidhri Mannion, a composer and music producer who teaches at Brunel University of London, noted that AI-assisted music tools could democratize music creation in ways similar to how affordable digital recording software transformed the industry in recent decades. By helping songwriters and musicians communicate ideas and collaborate more easily, these tools that generate polished-sounding material from voice or text prompts could enable broader participation in creative expression

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Navigating Copyright Concerns While Creating Demo Arrangements

The use of AI music generation occurs against a backdrop of significant controversy in the music industry. Sony Music Entertainment, Universal Music Group, and Warner Records sued Suno and Udio in June 2024 over copyright concerns, claiming their copyrighted work was used to train the models behind these platforms. Universal later reached a settlement and partnership deal with Udio, while Warner did the same with Suno

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. For serious musicians like Smith, however, these platforms serve a different purpose—not to replace human creativity but to facilitate it when physical constraints intervene.

Smith released his debut album, "In the Springtime," in 2023, wanting to give his two sons a way to remember when he could perform and record music himself. "I'd always written, I'd also played, I always sung," he said. "And immediately it became clear to me that I was in trouble, that my music was going to be seriously compromised"

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A Bittersweet Moment with Session Players

The Art of Letting Go was produced by Grammy-winning pianist Matt Rollings, who assembled a distinguished group of roots and bluegrass musicians. The roster included 16-time Grammy winner Jerry Douglas on dobro, Grammy-winning banjo player Alison Brown, fiddler Stuart Duncan, guitarist Bryan Sutton, bassist Viktor Krauss, and singers Jonatha Brooke and Glen Phillips

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. Grammy-nominated guitarist Julian Lage performed on both the title track and "Horizon," the latter becoming a bittersweet high point in Smith's career.

Despite the progression of Parkinson's disease, Smith managed to play a guitar duet with Lage during the recording. "I hadn't been able to play for months, but I kept telling myself that if I wrote something to take to the studio, perhaps the clouds would part for a few minutes," Smith recalled. "That's what happened. I had a window of about 10 minutes in the studio when my arm freed up. So in the end, I was able to capture the last breath of my guitar playing"

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. For Smith, singing in a Nashville studio alongside musicians he had admired for decades was "an extraordinary moment."

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