American Split AI: How Eddie Sing Rebuilt His Album with AI - Jack Righteous

American Split AI: How Eddie Sing Rebuilt His Album with AI

Gary Whittaker

American Split AI: Eddie Sing’s Bold Album Remake with Artificial Intelligence

By Jack Righteous – Nov 7, 2025

What happens when an indie artist rebuilds an entire album using artificial intelligence? Songwriter Eddie Sing & The 31 Days has done exactly that with American Split AI, a complete AI-assisted remake of his 2023 debut album American Split. The result is a groundbreaking experiment that blurs the line between human creativity and machine input.

In an era where technology and art increasingly intersect, Eddie Sing’s project offers a first-of-its-kind case study in using AI not as a gimmick, but as a genuine creative tool to expand an album’s horizons. This longform feature explores how and why Eddie Sing reinvented American Split, what role AI played in vocals, instrumentation, arrangement, and mixing, and what this means for independent musicians navigating the age of AI.

By examining verified details and critical reactions, we’ll uncover the artistic intent, technical process, and broader implications of American Split AI.

The Original American Split (2023): Concept and Impact

Released on January 6, 2023, the original American Split album was far from a conventional debut. Eddie Sing & The 31 Days (the alter-ego project of songwriter Brian Mannix) conceived American Split as both a musical epic and an interactive experience. The album’s cover doubled as a board game, and alongside the music came an Alternate Reality Game (ARG) that invited listeners to become players in its narrative.

At its core, American Split tackled heavy themes in a playful format. The board-game-themed artwork and ARG elements were brightly colored and fun on the surface, but they served as an entry point to explore topics ranging from love and romance to racism, sexism, homophobia, and poverty. Each track on the album corresponded to a step in the “game,” complete with challenge cards and narrative elements that mirrored the song’s subject matter.

For example, the opening track “Some Justice Opportunity” (featuring hip-hop elements) plunges the listener into issues of inequity and police interaction, while fragments of news reports play like chance cards in the background. On the game board – which depicts symbols like a torn American flag, mirrors, and dice – the torn flag at the start represents instability and the yearning for unity, setting the stage for an album that doesn’t shy away from America’s deepest fractures.

Musically, Eddie Sing & The 31 Days drew from eclectic influences. Critics noted the project channels the vibrancy of Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band combined with Billy Joel’s fiery social critique, all filtered through a modern indie lens. The album traverses genres – from the slow, country-tinged ballad “Moonlight Summer Dance” to the classic rock anthem “This My America” (featuring an explosive saxophone solo by Richie Cannata of Billy Joel’s band). The track “Stand Up” delivers punk-like fury in response to social injustice, even referencing real-world events like the Roe v. Wade controversy. Meanwhile, a song like “The Love” offers a tender, piano-and-strings moment, wrapping the listener in layered vocals and introspective mood.

Through it all, Eddie Sing’s storytelling was brutally realistic yet artful, using each song to narrate a story that connects deeply with listeners.

Why Remake the Album with AI? The Artist’s Vision in 2025

Fast forward to late 2025: Eddie Sing announces American Split AI, a complete reimagining of his debut album created entirely with the aid of AI tools. This move prompts an obvious question – why remake an album that was already so ambitious and conceptually rich?

The answer lies in Eddie Sing’s evolving artistic vision and his unique background. Brian Mannix (the man behind the Eddie Sing persona) is not only a musician and former teacher, but also an experienced AI developer – giving him both the technical know-how and artistic drive to explore uncharted territory. His intent was to “perfect his original music” using cutting-edge technology, bringing new life to the songs while preserving their soul.

In interviews and posts, Eddie Sing has made it clear that the project was driven by creative curiosity and a desire for improvement, not by any sense of dissatisfaction. American Split AI gave him a chance to answer a provocative question: “Can AI be part of an authentic artistic statement?” By all accounts, his answer is a resounding yes.

Rather than delegating the artistry to a machine, Sing approached AI as a sophisticated instrument – much like a new synthesizer or production suite – that could help refine textures, clean up stems, and explore alternate mixes within his songs. The goal was to make the album sound as vibrant and contemporary as possible, aligning it with the futuristic themes it already embraced. “Our reality has become closely intertwined with artificial intelligence,” Eddie noted, “so why not let music b...

Critically, Eddie Sing remained the author and visionary at every step – a point he emphasizes when discussing American Split AI. “Technology can serve creativity if the artist maintains control over the vision,” he demonstrates with this album. His role was akin to a director guiding a digital orchestra: he fed the original tracks and lyrics into AI systems, supervised the generative process, and chose which outputs to use or tweak. By his own report, this took extensive experime...

AI-Generated Vocals and New Voices

One of the most striking innovations in American Split AI lies in its vocals. Eddie Sing replaced many of his own original lead vocals with AI-generated performances trained on other voices. These weren’t anonymous synthetic voices either – Sing used AI models trained on voices of well-known artists (within copyright-safe, experimental settings) as well as entirely synthetic character voices developed using tools like ElevenLabs, Uberduck, and Voicery.

The result? A cast of AI vocalists that breathed new life into familiar lyrics. For instance, the song “Stand Up” – originally a punk-tinged anthem delivered by Eddie himself – was now voiced by an AI-simulated female singer with a grittier tone, adding tension and urgency to the song’s rebellious core. Other tracks featured combinations of natural and synthetic voices stacked together in harmony, producing textures that would be difficult or impossible to replicate using traditional meth...

Sing made deliberate choices about which songs needed a new voice. In some cases, the AI delivery captured subtle emotional nuances that surpassed the original takes. In others, the shift in tone or identity gave the lyrics fresh context – challenging the listener to re-evaluate meaning and ownership.

However, he didn’t fully automate the vocal production. All the final results were manually curated, edited, and blended. This hybrid approach – using AI for generation, then human direction for quality control – characterizes the overall ethos of the project. It wasn’t “push-button creativity.” It was iterative, interpretive, and deliberate.

AI-Driven Instrumentation and Arrangement

In addition to vocals, Eddie Sing used AI to reimagine the album’s instrumentation. Using tools like AIVA, Amper Music, and custom-trained audio transformers, he generated alternate stems for drums, strings, synths, and ambient effects. The AI was fed themes and chord progressions from the original album, but it responded by suggesting alternate grooves, novel transitions, and even entire bridge sections that hadn’t existed in the 2023 version.

Tracks like “Moonlight Summer Dance” now featured lush string arrangements that built cinematic depth, while “This My America” was driven by a heavier rhythm section and a more aggressive electric guitar tone – all generated using AI-suggested patches that Sing refined in post-production. Some arrangements felt entirely reorchestrated while others retained their core shape but benefited from enhanced textures.

By collaborating with AI this way, Eddie positioned himself less as a traditional composer and more as a curator-director – selecting from an array of potential instrumental choices to shape emotional and narrative resonance.

AI-Assisted Mixing and Production

Sing also used AI for mastering, spatial mixing, and spectral enhancement. Using platforms like LANDR, RoEx, and custom diffusion models trained on genre-specific presets, he refined the final mix to enhance clarity, dynamic range, and stereo presence. The AI models were particularly useful in balancing vocal layers, managing low-frequency conflicts, and adding subtle reverbs that matched room profiles.

Interestingly, Sing shared that he sometimes ran the same track through multiple AI mastering pipelines and compared them manually – keeping the version that sounded most “emotionally aligned” with his vision. This again reinforced the hybrid model: AI for possibility generation, human for intent selection.

Artistic and Technical Significance

American Split AI wasn’t just a technical exercise. It posed real questions about creativity, authorship, and musical identity. By handing parts of the process over to machines – but retaining full editorial control – Eddie Sing created a project that is both futuristic and deeply personal.

Many reviewers have praised the project for walking a delicate line: using AI to elevate the musicality of the original work without feeling gimmicky or disingenuous. It is not a deepfake album. It is a “re-authoring” by the original artist using contemporary tools.

In this sense, American Split AI represents what AI can be at its best in creative domains: a collaborator that extends, not replaces, the artist’s vision.

Legal and Ethical Questions

Because American Split AI featured AI-generated vocals resembling famous artists and synthesized voices derived from commercial datasets, Eddie Sing took care to frame the project as a non-commercial, artistic work. The AI voices were used under fair use doctrine for commentary and artistic transformation, and the album was released as a free experimental stream without monetization on traditional platforms.

Still, the project reignited debates about AI voice cloning and its legality. Under U.S. law, voice likenesses can fall under right-of-publicity statutes, which vary by state. In Canada, where Eddie also has fanbase reach, personality rights are governed provincially, but also interact with fair dealing. Because Sing did not use any names or imply endorsement from specific artists, he stayed within a gray area – a space often occupied by parody, commentary, or experimental remix culture.

Importantly, American Split AI did not use copyrighted lyrics or master recordings from other artists. All content originated from the original American Split album, with only stylistic vocal approximations in certain songs. This provided strong footing for artistic experimentation under fair use protections.

What This Means for Indie Creators

For independent musicians, American Split AI is both a blueprint and a provocation. It demonstrates what’s possible when one person with a laptop, talent, and determination uses AI not to shortcut creativity but to deepen it. The project suggests that AI can democratize access to high-quality production tools, allowing indie artists to reimagine their catalogs, push sonic boundaries, and create multimedia experiences that compete with major label resources.

At the same time, it highlights the importance of artistic vision and ethical responsibility. Without Sing’s original songwriting, his experimental design, and his careful attention to AI curation, the project could have easily become another lifeless “AI-generated” gimmick. Instead, it became a work of commentary, augmentation, and reinvention.

Key Takeaways

  • American Split AI reimagines a complex debut album using voice cloning, generative instrumentation, and AI mixing tools.
  • Eddie Sing remained in full creative control throughout, using AI as a collaborator, not a replacement.
  • The album stays within fair use and experimental boundaries, raising vital questions about legality and ethics.
  • Independent musicians can take inspiration from the approach and artistic clarity that drove the project.

In a time when AI threatens to flood the creative landscape with synthetic output, Eddie Sing & The 31 Days reminds us that technology alone is not the artist. The artist is the one who asks the questions, sets the vision, and chooses which paths to take. American Split AI is not just an album. It’s an answer to what music can be when man and machine collaborate with purpose.

Cover image for 'American Split AI: Song Review' with vintage microphone, American flag background, digital waveform, and JackRighteous.com branding in a bold modern layou
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