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IndustryApril 24, 2026

AI Music Flood: 75K Tracks Hit Deezer Daily & UMG Fights Back

Jake Morrison

Jake Morrison

Staff Writer

4 min read
Animated graph showing tidal wave of AI music tracks overwhelming a streaming platform, representing the 75,000 daily uploads

The AI music revolution isn't coming—it's here. From copyright battles to an ocean of algorithmically-generated tracks, here's what you need to know.

The AI Music Tsunami: What 75,000 Daily Tracks Really Means

Picture this: every single day, Deezer gets hit with enough AI-generated music to fill 375 albums. That's not sci-fi—it's happening right now. As someone who used to grade high school band performances, I can tell you this makes my old stack of recorder quizzes look mercifully small.

Why This Matters Beyond the Numbers

  • Discovery drowns first: Human artists already struggle to stand out—now they're competing with an infinite jukebox
  • Quality control? Most platforms still treat AI tracks like any other upload (for better or worse)
  • The copyright conundrum: When an AI generates a track that sounds suspiciously like Drake, who's responsible?

UMG Draws the Line in the Sand

Universal Music Group isn't waiting around to find out. Their lawsuit against AI startup Quince reads like a legal version of "talk to the hand." Here's the breakdown:

The Core Arguments

  1. Quince allegedly used UMG's catalog to train its AI without permission
  2. The resulting outputs could "dilute" the market for original works
  3. This sets precedent for how much training data is "fair use"

Think of it like sampling culture in the 90s, but with algorithms instead of turntables. The outcome could reshape how AI companies operate.

What This Means for Music Fans

Before you panic about robots replacing your favorite artists, let's get real:

  • The good: More music discovery options than ever before
  • The messy: Sorting actual artistry from algorithmic output gets trickier
  • The hopeful: Tools like AI-assisted mixing could help human creators work faster

At the end of the day, we're all just trying to figure out how to surf this wave without wiping out. Stay tuned—I'll keep breaking it down as the story develops.

AI-assisted, editorially reviewed. Source

Jake Morrison
Jake Morrison·Staff Writer

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