Meet the Man Ruining Your Favorite Rock Songs With Mashups
Some issues can’t be unheard.
That’s roughly the complete level of the There I Ruined It YouTube channel, brainchild of Texas-based musician Dustin Ballard. Using Pro Tools, he is been mashing up diametrically opposing songs to create new tracks which can be each fascinating and unhinged, in addition to using AI expertise to make it sound like sure artists singing numbers you’d by no means anticipate. In the phrases of the channel’s slogan: “Lovingly destroying your favorite songs.”
Some examples that may be present in the piece beneath: Chappell Roan’s “Good Luck, Babe!” with Fleetwood Mac’s “Dreams,” a model of Jay-Z’s “99 Problems” as carried out by the Beach Boys and an unique composition titled “What Red Hot Chili Peppers Sound Like to People Who Don’t Like Red Hot Chili Peppers.”
Ballard additionally posts his musical Frankenstein creations to TikTok and Instagram, the place he is amassed tens of millions of followers. Loudwire’s sister web site UCR caught up with him over electronic mail, anticipating some clarification.
How do you choose the songs you employ for the movies? Are there sure standards?
I begin often with very well-known songs. The extra acquainted a listener is with the lyrics and melody, the stronger the dissonance after they hear that in the “wrong” kind (whether or not it’s a style change or a melody modified to suit a unique track it is being mixed with).
You’re a musician your self — how does which have an affect in your mashups?
It can be laborious to think about pulling any of those off if I weren’t a musician. Changing a melody to suit a chord construction it was by no means supposed for requires some primary concept and a musician’s instinct. Plus, typically I’m taking part in the devices myself, in addition to singing. Even the AI singing is definitely my very own singing put via a “filter,” so the inflection, intonation and impersonation nonetheless must be there first.
With the rise of AI in songwriting, are there any challenges or issues you have got with utilizing the likeness of individuals’s voices?
In my opinion, there are very restricted conditions the place it’s ethical to copy somebody’s voice with AI. Everything I do is clearly labeled and parody (no person is being misled into considering Hank Williams truly sang “Straight Outta Compton”). I usually evaluate it to Photoshop: The Onion can create a practical altered picture of a star in the context of parody and no person has any challenge with that as a result of it isn’t deceptive. The method I exploit AI is principally the audio equal of that.
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You began this mission throughout the pandemic — did you ever anticipate it might attain the degree of recognition it has?
I actually by no means imagined this may take off in such a method. It’s been an amazing artistic outlet.
What’s your favourite mashup you have ever accomplished?
“What Red Hot Chili Peppers Sound Like to People Who Don’t Like Red Hot Chili Peppers.” In that one, I truly bought to write down unique lyrics myself which was actually enjoyable. The voice, music, harmonies and video enhancing all got here collectively in a convincing method, and the broader commentary on Anthony Kiedis’ uncommon writing fashion actually resonated with individuals.
Honorable Mentions:
“Lose Yourself” x Mario Bros
“Bodies (Drowning Pool)” — Kids’ Edition
Nickelback x Ray Charles (“Hit the Road Nickelback”)
Johnny Cash Sings “Barbie Girl”
Hank Williams Sings “Straight Outta Compton”
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Gallery Credit: Philip Trapp