Soul singer who has 2.8million Spotify listeners and makes £2k-per-day from streams is revealed to be an AI-generated FAKE

It’s been discovered that a popular Spotify artist, earning around £2,000 daily from streams, isn’t a human musician at all – they’re actually created by artificial intelligence.

Soul singer Sienna Rose quickly became popular with her smooth, sensual songs. Fans have been especially impressed by her lovely and captivating voice.

Although many people compared Sienna to popular English singer Olivia Dean, it’s now come to light that Sienna isn’t a real person – her voice, appearance, and music are all artificially created.

As a big Spotify user, I’ve been following Sienna’s rise, and it’s honestly a bit unsettling. They’re still letting people stream her music like everything’s normal, without any mention that she’s not a real person! Now, people are saying the same person who made that popular AI reggae artist is behind Sienna too, which just makes the whole thing even stranger.

Despite everything, Sienna is finding success with her online streams, earning approximately £2,000 each day.

Sienna steadily released new music in the fall, starting with a six-song EP called ‘Velvet Embrace’ in September. She followed that with an eight-song project in October, and then a nine-song EP, ‘The Shape of Tenderness,’ in November.

She then went onto ‘release’ a ten-track ‘debut album’ Honey On The Moon in December.

Sienna’s music blends the warm, vintage feel of 1960s soul with a modern sound, creating songs that are both grand and emotionally honest.

Sienna Rose doesn’t just sing; she connects with listeners through honest and beautiful vocals, truly telling stories with her music.

According to The Sun, Sienna Rose was created by the same person behind Let Babylon Burn, an AI reggae artist with 756,000 monthly listeners.

It’s thought the man in question is Robert Lancaster, though little is know about who he is.

Spotify explained to the publication that many artists are currently using AI to create music, making it challenging to monitor and label content generated this way.

However, Bandcamp recently announced that music created entirely or mostly by artificial intelligence is not allowed on their platform.

Daily Mail has contacted a representative for Spotify for comment. 

Spotify has recently hardened its position on using AI to impersonate other artists. 

The platform announced it will take down songs that copy another artist’s voice without their consent, regardless of whether it’s done using AI or other techniques.

This covers music that doesn’t explicitly credit the artist being imitated, but features vocals that are still easily identifiable as theirs.

Over the past year, Spotify took down 75 million songs created by artificial intelligence. They’ve also added new features to prevent the upload of AI-generated spam.

Last May, Paul McCartney and Elton John joined over 400 artists and creators in calling on the UK government to require AI companies to disclose the copyrighted material they used to develop their AI models.

In an open letter to Prime Minister Keir Starmer, they argued that copyright for creative work is essential to the success of creative industries.

The Labour party is proposing that AI developers could use copyrighted material to train their systems without getting permission, as long as copyright holders specifically choose to exclude their work.

Giving away our work to a few large foreign tech companies would mean missing out on significant future growth and revenue.

We strongly encourage the government to approve the changes proposed by Baroness Kidron in the House of Lords, which would make copyright rules more open and clear.

Last February, artists like Kate Bush and Damon Albarn participated in a unique protest. They released a 47-minute silent album called ‘Is This What We Want?’ to highlight concerns about artificial intelligence being trained using copyrighted material without permission.

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2026-01-15 03:19