That’s according to research by ticket site TickPick, which recently tested whether people prefer artificial or human songwriters. The company scraped thousands of lyrics from genius.com and grouped them into rock, rap, country, and pop songs. The words were then fed to a text-generating machine called GPT-2, which used machine learning to create new sets of lyrics. The system composed 100 songs in each genre, which the TickPick team turned into four original six-track albums. They then ran the lyrics through Grammarly’s plagiarism checker to check that the AI songwriters weren’t stealing from the artists that inspired them. [Read: Researcher builds AI rapper to spit sick rhymes — with mixed results] They then tested whether 1,003 music fans could spot which lyrics were made by AI and which were written by real musicians — and whether they preferred the songs created by humans or machines.

Lyrical machines

In each category, the respondents were shown three lyrics written by acclaimed human artists, and one created by an AI. When asked which verse was the most emotional, almost 40% of people said they more touched by the AI’s words than lyrics written by Adele, R.E.M., and Johnny Cash. And who can blame them? Only a heart of stone would be unmoved by this tear-jerker: After wiping tears from their eyes, the respondents were asked which songwriter was the most creative. Again, the AI smashed the so-called legends, attracting 65% of votes for this inspirational poetry: Humanity’s last chance to overcome the machines came in the overall favorite category — and the AI was finally defeated. It nonetheless deserves applause for this imaginative effort:

Generating genres

The experiment also revealed which genres are hardest for AI songwriters to master. The respondents struggled to spot which pop and country lyrics were written by an AI. And its rock song was so emo that they thought it was written by My Chemical Romance or Nirvana. However, they were less convinced by artificial rapper Young AI. Almost 36% of them recognized that a human did not create these bars: The researchers believe this is because the unusual syntax of rap songs is hard for algorithms to interpret, which should keep rappers safe in their jobs for now. But for rockers, pop stars, and country singers, it might be time to pass their mics to the machines.