An AI-generated song called “Through My Soul” has racked up over 11 million YouTube views and millions of streams worldwide. Nobody knows who really made it. The credited artist, Enlly Blue, is a fake persona with six full albums and no human behind it. This is the reality of AI music in 2026, and it is only getting louder.
How an AI song ended up on a real setlist
Adrian Younge, the composer and co-founder of the Los Angeles-based Jazz Is Dead label, heard “Through My Soul” and felt something was off immediately. He told Fast Company he could sense the track had been constructed rather than performed, its influences pulled from somewhere and stitched together by a machine.
So he did something unexpected. Younge recruited his Midnight Hour band and vocalist Loren Oden to record a fully human version. He told the musicians to go big, be bold, and make the song feel alive. They performed it live at the Lodge Room in L.A., and something clicked.
A song written by a machine and performed by a machine has no soul, but with real musicians behind it, it finally meant something. Younge liked it so much he added it to his touring setlist.
The plan to give human-made music its own verified label

The cover song is the centerpiece of a campaign called Played by Humans, created with ad agency TBWAChiatDay LA. Artists and labels can upload their music to a tool that checks for AI audio fingerprints. Tracks that pass receive a certifiable stamp for public display, similar to how explicit content is labeled.
The tool has already scanned over 1.6 million tracks, and the numbers behind this are staggering. According to Deezer, 44% of all music uploaded to streaming platforms daily is now AI-generated, and 97% of listeners cannot tell the difference.
How is the music industry reacting to AI music?
The music industry’s response to all of this has been telling. Spotify launched a Verified by Spotify badge in April to help listeners identify human artists. Then in May, Spotify turned around and struck a deal with Universal Music Group to let Premium subscribers create AI-generated covers and remixes of real songs, for an extra fee.

So on one hand, Spotify is trying to help you spot human music. On the other hand, it is building a paid tool to generate more AI music using human artists’ work. Spotify says participating artists will collect royalties on anything made from their work.
Played by Humans is not anti-AI. It just analyzes the music itself, because it believes you deserve to know exactly what you are actually listening to. Meanwhile, Sony has also developed technology that can identify original songs hidden inside AI-generated music, to sniff out plagiarism.






