master class rival studio First released today Online school using AI Musicians, songwriters, and producers can learn from the industry’s top artists, create new songs, get feedback from like-minded peers, and access Studio’s AI coach to keep them on track with personalized schedules and deadlines. .
The waiting list officially opens today. Studio has two pricing options: $199 per month or $1,799 per year.
The studio’s music school features more than 110 popular artists, including Charlie Puth, Kygo, HER, Idina Menzel, Pentatonix, Ryan Tedder (frontman of OneRepublic), Alexander 23, Tiny, Chelsea Cutler, Jonas Blue, Shane, and more. We offer thousands of exclusive lessons from instructors. McAnally and Louis Bell.
Choose from over 100 topics including vocal production, songwriting, music business, sound design, music theory, cover songs, musical theater, and more, and genres like alternative, classical, country, EDM, folk, hip-hop, and more. , indie pop, lo-fi, metal, R&B, etc.
This online accelerator leverages OpenAI’s GPT-4 to feature an AI-powered coach that delivers a personalized curriculum each month based on your interests, specific goals, learning style, and experience level. You can also design a curriculum based on a student’s specific schedule and engagement level, so if a student has time off, the AI coach can work around that time off to ensure the student is making progress. Students can enter a set number of hours to spend on the lesson.
Students are then assigned a custom-built project and leave at the end of the month with at least one completed, release-ready song.
In addition to GPT-4, AI Coach is powered by two proprietary frameworks that “address GPT-4’s key limitations regarding long-term planning, pacing, sequencing, and effective instructional design. “Personalization on the fly,” co-founder Max Deutsch explained to TechCrunch. “GPT-4 is particularly difficult in instructional design for creative fields such as music, where there is no single ‘right answer’ for each step of the process. ”
The framework leverages Studio’s thousands of hours of video lessons, the expertise of Studio’s curriculum design team, and years of achievement-based student data to help you understand which lessons, projects, and peer matches are of different types. Decide what will produce the best results for your learners.
“By combining GPT-4 with these frameworks, we are able to build highly effective, well-paced, well-ordered, and correctly personalized curricula for our students, which can be adjusted as students progress. You can proactively and effectively update plans to keep students on track and motivated,” added Deutsch.
Finally, we have an algorithm that matches students with a peer group of 20 people based on similar preferences, so you get weekly feedback from people who are knowledgeable about the same topic.
Please note that Studio’s Music School is not designed for beginners looking to start a career in the music industry, but for creators who already understand the basics and want to improve their skills. please. Although no equipment is required to participate in the class, Studio says most people already have some kind of music software or DAW (digital audio workstation) and a microphone to record music.
Deutsch says the online course platform plans to launch more AI-powered schools later this year focused on different fields such as writing, filmmaking, and design.
In 2017, Studio was founded with creative people in mind, filling a gap in creative learning spaces where subjects such as music, performing arts and baking are often neglected. The company currently offers classes to more than 1 million students.
Studio has previously partnered with many companies including Forerunner Ventures, Human Capital, Greenoaks Capital, Floodgate, Jeffrey Katzenberg’s WndrCo, Airbnb co-founder Joe Gebbia, LinkedIn chairman Jeff Weiner, Instagram co-founder Mike Krieger, and StitchFix. It has raised $60 million from investors. Founder Katrina Lake, Yelp founder Jeremy Stopleman, Intuit founder Scott Cook, Zillow founder Spencer Raskoff, and more.