Techniques
The Best AI Music Generator for Commercial Creators in 2026. AI-Generated.
By January 2026, the conversation around AI in music has shifted from "Will it replace us?" to "How do I use it to finish tracks faster?" As a senior audio editor who has reviewed everything from Suno’s latest updates to complex DAW plugins, I have seen the market flood with tools. However, for creators who need a balance between ease of use and professional control, Create Music AI has established itself as a formidable ecosystem.
By techfusion17 days ago in Art
Jim Sloan
By Brian D’Ambrosio At 90, Jim Sloan has lived several lifetimes’ worth of work—carpenter, sign painter, excavator, sawmiller, road-builder and the go-to rattlesnake remover of Galisteo, New Mexico. Art may be the through-line, but it has never been the source of his income, nor the center of his universe. Sloan has always kept one foot in the studio and the other in the soil, without bothering to decide which world he truly belongs to. The truth is that he fits cleanly into neither, and he has long since stopped trying.
By Brian D'Ambrosio 23 days ago in Art
What Voice Cloning Technology Means for Creators and Digital Identity
The rise of artificial intelligence has reshaped the creative landscape in countless ways, from AI-generated visual art to automated music composition, and one of the most intriguing frontiers today is voice cloning. With tools that let users clone your voice using only a short sample of speech, creators and digital communicators are discovering new ways to produce audio content that feels natural and expressive.
By aliyashahzadi25 days ago in Art
The Crossroads of Becoming
I found it by accident. Tucked between a laundromat and a shuttered bookstore, half-hidden by ivy and time, stood a rusted phone booth. Not the sleek glass kind from movies, but an old metal one—peeling paint, cracked receiver, a dial so stiff it groaned when turned. No one had used it in years. Probably decades.
By KAMRAN AHMAD30 days ago in Art
Adjust the Sails
Living creatures mean motivations. When motivations are not met, we feel sad, wounded, frustrated. So, we need a strong mindset. A lot of things are not in our control. But we can decide our responses. It's within our power. It can make significant change in our moods and life journey.
By Seema Patelabout a month ago in Art
Embodied Performance and the Rise of a New Chinese Australian Screen Language
Olivia Wang in Wake Her Up — a body led screen performance recognised across international film festivals. Olivia Wang in Wake Her Up — a body led screen performance recognised across international film festivals.
By Fusion Artabout a month ago in Art
The Bench by the River
Every evening, I walked past the same old bench by the river. Its wood was weathered, gray with age, the paint long gone, and yet it had a quiet dignity that made me pause, if only for a second. I had always been in a rush—rushing home from school, rushing to finish homework, rushing to keep up with life. But that evening, something about the rain, or maybe just my exhaustion, made me stop.
By Yasir khanabout a month ago in Art
Remote Patient Monitoring Powered by Ambient Listening in Healthcare
Remote patient monitoring (RPM) is transforming how healthcare providers track, manage, and respond to patients’ health conditions outside traditional clinical settings. One of the most innovative advancements driving this transformation is ambient listening in healthcare, which leverages advanced audio sensors and AI technologies to provide continuous, unobtrusive monitoring of patients’ vital signs and behavioral patterns. By integrating ambient listening technology into RPM systems, healthcare providers can enhance patient safety, improve care outcomes, and reduce hospital readmissions.
By Steve Waughabout a month ago in Art
How Colors Influence Your Mood and Behavior: The Psychology of Color
The Blue Room Where Everything Changed Maya hadn't cried in three years. Not at her grandmother's funeral. Not when her engagement ended. Not even when she lost the job she'd spent a decade building.
By Ameer Moaviaabout a month ago in Art
The Day the Silence Learned to Speak
On the edge of a quiet town called Marrowell stood a clock tower that had not spoken in twelve years. People still checked the time by it, of course. The hands moved faithfully, circling the face with stubborn loyalty, but the bell—once the town’s heartbeat—had gone silent after a storm cracked its iron tongue. The mayor promised repairs. The years promised forgetting. And forgetting, as it often does, won.
By Yasir khanabout a month ago in Art











