I have always been inspired by the music of Ólafur Arnalds, Nils Frahm, Max Richter, and other neoclassical artists.
I remember listening to Ólafur and Max Richter probably 18 years ago. Their music touches me deeply, almost allowing me to dive into other worlds.
Today, I was wondering if I could somehow get my hands on "making" this type of music. No goal, just curiosity—I wondered what a tool like Suno would create if I tried to describe this "world" that I hear and feel.
The result, to me, is completely absurd, without exaggeration. It created a song that in no way sounded synthetic or artificial. I listened to it at least ten times, trying to find something wrong, something that bothered me or failed to move me.
A disclaimer: In no way do I compare this with actually making the real music—the artistic process with all its ups and downs.
But it inspired me to create a fully immersive audiovisual experiment using Anthropic Claude and Google Gemini: an interactive visual experience built around the song.
Take a moment, put on your headphones, and immerse yourself for 3:13 minutes. I'd recommend checking it on desktop.
View experiment