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The Whitney Houston estate has partnered with AI startup Moises to bring the late superstar’s vocals back to concert stages across seven U.S. cities, marking a significant moment in the growing intersection of artificial intelligence and posthumous musical performances.prnewswire
“The Voice of Whitney: A Symphonic Celebration” tour launched its latest leg on September 20 at Cincinnati Music Hall, utilizing Moises’ advanced stem separation technology to isolate Houston’s original vocals from her recordings. The AI-powered platform, which raised $40 million in Series A funding earlier this year and was named Apple’s iPad App of the Year for 2024, processes 2.5 million minutes of audio daily through 45 proprietary AI models.musicbusinessworldwide
The collaboration addresses a critical challenge faced by the Houston estate: many of the singer’s original multitrack recordings, including separated vocals and instrumental tracks, have been lost over time. Moises’ technology can extract individual elements from fully mixed recordings while maintaining what the company describes as “near-studio quality audio.”prnewswire
“This project demanded exceptionally high-caliber stem separation, something Moises leads the industry in achieving,” said Geraldo Ramos, CEO of Moises. “We had to isolate Whitney’s vocals from fully mixed recordings without compromising the emotional power of her performance.”prnewswire
The tour features live orchestras performing alongside Houston’s extracted vocals and rare archival footage, creating what organizers describe as an immersive musical experience thirteen years after the singer’s death in 2012.futurism
The Whitney Houston project represents what Park Avenue Artists co-president Ross Michaels calls “the first of several planned collaborations that will use AI to illuminate new dimensions of an artist’s work”. This approach contrasts with controversial AI applications that have emerged without estate approval.prnewswire
Recent industry developments have highlighted the contentious nature of AI in music. Germany’s GEMA filed a lawsuit against AI platform Suno earlier this year, while music legends Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr have expressed concerns about unauthorized AI uses potentially “wiping out rising stars”. However, the Houston project has full estate backing, with executor Pat Houston stating the collaboration was executed “with the heart, care, and creative excellence that Whitney always embodied”.axs
The seven-city tour continues through November 22, with stops in Wilmington, North Carolina; Thousand Oaks, California; and concluding in Mesa, Arizona. According to Primary Wave Music, all previous premiere performances have sold out, indicating strong audience appetite for AI-enhanced legacy artist experiences.whitneyhouston