Credits.muso.ai

Greetings.

Have any of the editors used this site as the source of information?

As they state: “Muso.AI was founded in 2017 at NRG Recording Studios in Los Angeles after years of searching for a universal credit database that could keep up with the digitization of music.“ And also i was told in their support: “We pull tracks from Spotify, so if tracks aren’t on Spotify, you’ll be unable to claim your credits. Then we pull credits too from Spotify, Tidal, Jaxsta, and Genius. Record Label credits are pulled only from Spotify directly, and Publisher credits only from the MLC.“

Do you think it could be used as a data source for credits purposes at musicbrainz?

Taking this opportunity, I would also like to raise an old discussion:

Could we use this site as a (more or less) reliable source to check artist aliases? For example in this certain case it “indirectly” shows that this is the same person.

MB still prefers to follow a politic to divide a legal name and alias onto different artist entities? I am asking again that coz, for example, in production music it almost impossible to say if its a “different project“ or not.

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If the artist has multiple projects or has releases under its legal name, then you need to add the legal name artist to “link” the person between the projects. If not, an alias is enough

Examples:

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So they scrape online services for information and then perform “AI” on it. That doesn’t sound very “verified” to me.

Are you sure we can trust this source?

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If it is AI instead of Human verification it sounds very untrustable to me.

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If the artist has multiple projects or has releases under its legal name, then you need to add the legal name artist to “link” the person between the projects.

I know this. I meant what is this “project“ in production music composers case - if they are simply “silently“ write music for the labels. Imagine essentially a hired worker who makes something to order and then doesn’t even manage it.

Are you sure we can trust this source?

That’s why i created this thread - throw your opinions here. Personally, I was surprised that this site wasn’t just some fan idea, but something “official,” meaning there was a commercial company behind it.

If it is AI instead of Human verification it sounds very untrustable to me.

No, actually, their idea is a little different. You register on the site and can “claim” a specific artist profile—after that, you can edit the existing metadata and add new information.

The only question is how many artists (or their affiliates) actually do this on this site.