I never learned to play an instrument.
I’ve messed around with music software before, sure — but I never stuck with it. Too many knobs. Too much friction.
Still, I’ve always had ideas. Atmospheres. Aesthetic worlds.
Stuff I could hear in my head but could never make real.
That’s changed.
Because now, with a few lines of text and the right tools, I can go from concept to song to music video in less time than it used to take just to book a studio session.
No mic. No camera. Just prompts.
And what came out?
It actually slaps.
It Starts With the Feeling
The tools are abstract, sure. But the process is emotional.
I sit with a vibe — something half-formed in my head — and I write it down.
Not musical notes. Not chord progressions. Just a feeling. A setting. A mood.
The right words in the right order.
Suno does nearly all the rest.
What comes out after some experimenting sounds like a song I wish existed.
Like something I would’ve saved to my playlist if I had found it late at night, scrolling.
Sometimes it’s moody. Sometimes it’s absurd. Sometimes it surprises me in ways I didn’t expect.
But the crazy part is — it feels like mine.
Then I Take That Feeling and Give It a Face
Once the audio is done, the visuals follow.
I describe what I see in my mind — just like I did with the music.
And another model (Veo, Runway, whatever tool’s up next) turns it into video.
Scene by scene. Shot by shot.
Edited, timed, and synced — all with prompts
I’m not holding a camera. I’m not filming anything.
But I’m directing. I’m shaping. I’m sculpting something from nothing.
What used to take a team now takes a few minutes and a clear vision.
🧠 Prompting Is the New Performing
You don’t need technical chops anymore.
You need aesthetic awareness. Curiosity. Taste.
Prompting is an artform.
It’s not about typing — it’s about directing invisible collaborators.
You guide the sound. The visuals. The vibe.
You decide the world the audience will step into.
It’s not easier than traditional creation.
It’s just different.
Faster, maybe. But not lazier.
You still have to care.
I’m Not Just Making Songs. I’m Running Experiments.
Each track is a test.
Each video is a prototype.
Each idea becomes a micro-world I can drop into existence, tweak, remix, evolve.
Sometimes I throw it away.
Sometimes I release it.
Sometimes I watch people react to it like it came from a real artist — not a bunch of AI outputs strung together by a guy who never picked up a guitar.
This isn’t about pretending.
It’s about exploring.
And the deeper I go, the more I realize:
This isn’t just a new creative process.
It’s a new form of authorship.
Where This Is Going (Faster Than You Think)
1. The Stack Becomes Seamless
Within 24 to 48 months, you won’t need five tools.
You’ll need one.
You type a vibe. You get a track.
Then visuals. Then distribution.
All chained together. All editable. All live.
The future isn’t multi-tool. It’s unified.
Creation becomes a single flow — guided by intention.
2. The Artist Becomes a Construct
We won’t just be dropping songs.
We’ll be launching identities. Worlds. Virtual artists.
Not just as gimmicks — but as brands.
With lore. With arcs. With fans.
Some will be fronted by people.
Others will be fully synthetic.
Many will live in-between.
3. Music Becomes Liquid Culture
It won’t be about albums or charts.
It’ll be about moments.
Mood-based. Meme-driven. Auto-personalized.
You’ll hear a song once and it’ll disappear. Or morph. Or come back as a remix written by someone on the other side of the world using your original vibe.
Everything becomes ephemeral — but connected.
This Isn’t a Hack. It’s a Power Shift.
This isn’t cheating.
It’s not a shortcut.
It’s the next layer of creative leverage.
You still need vision.
You still need rhythm — even if it’s not coming from your hands.
You still need to care about what it feels like.
But you no longer need permission.
You no longer need a label, a studio, or a “real band.”
You just need to show up and prompt the world you want to hear.
Predatorialism was always about this:
Breaking the power structures that gate creativity, identity, and expression.
Now the tools are in our hands.
And if you know what you want to say —
You can say it louder, faster, and weirder than ever.
PLEASE ENJOY