This song is inspired by unsung heroes of great music who never made a big name for themselves. Musicians like:
• Emitt Rhodes, a fabulous young singer whose albums were compared to Paul McCartney.
• The '90s band, Jellyfish, whose fantastic two albums were filled with classic '60s & '70s styles; but they were outshined by the hair rock & grunge movements of the time.
• And the better known Marc Bolan, aka T-Rex, whose life came to an all-too-soon sad end with a car crash in 1977.
Muse (Classic Rock)
This song is about creativity, where the music and words come from when one creates a new song... (perhaps from a legendary mythical muse.)
Created using UDIO.com Music: "Muse" lyrics and arrangement by Jim Romer
This year's 2024 Santa image was created via physical pencil sketch, into Procreate for some "pencil setting" inking, and then under-colored and text added using Photoshop. ("BWAAH!" created using AI generating Ideogram.com.)
My wife and I enjoy watching Kathleen Madigan's weekly podcast; she's one of our favorite comedians. She often talks about her touring, including places she visits, foods she discovers, and gifts fans give her at shows. On one particular show, she mentioned a place called The Fainting Goat, where she purchased a small plastic goat figurine that makes that hilarious screaming sound we've all heard in videos. It never fails to be funny, and she uses it in nearly every podcast.
My 2024 Christmas Cartoon
When I do a Christmas cartoon, I want it to be unique. It's too easy to do the usual Christmas gags, puns or traditional jokes. So the goat scream was my influence in this image. Hopefully you can hear that goat scream in your head, (I certainly did as I was drawing it. Never not funny.)
This time I'm going for a more Folk-rock song, inspired by a little mix of The Waterboys, Tom Waits and the Jayhawks. I wanted to have a real Celtic vibe, with a hearty singer and I believe I got what I was trying to achieve.
When the Night Falls (Upbeat Folk Rock w/Celtic Undertones)
This song is about heartbreak, regret and hope; reflecting on a relationship that has crumbled under the weight of unspoken words and emotional scars. The narrator expresses feelings of betrayal and sorrow, emphasizing the pain caused by a partner′s indifference. The night symbolizes both the end, and a time for introspection -- evoking a melancholic yet hopeful yearning for a possible rekindling of their relationship.
Created using UDIO.com Music: 'When the Night Falls' Lyrics and arrangement by Jim Romer
This song was inspired by the '80s post-punk band New Order. It critiques someone for being superficial. The song was co-created with my friend and New Order fanatic, Struan Grant.
Superficial (Dark synth-pop with post-punk)
At the time, creating a song using Udio meant working with 32-second blocks of music.** After extensively studying New Order's style, I generated 4–6 samples approximating their sound for Struan to choose from. Every few days, we added another 32-second segment, repeating this process until the song was complete.
SIDENOTE: The song’s biggest weakness was the inability to replicate Bernard Sumner’s (New Order’s singer) vocal style. I tried hundreds of ways to describe Sumner’s unique, unpolished delivery but couldn’t capture it. If vocal control technology improves, I plan to revisit this song and update the vocals—though this may never happen if the current lawsuit rules the AI software guilty of copyright infringement.
Created using Udio’s AI technology Music: Superficial (Dark Synth-Pop with Post-Punk) Co-created by Jim Romer & Struan Grant using Udio.com Title by Struan Grant Lyrics by Jim Romer
As of this writing, Udio.com has improved, now allowing 2:10 song clips, trimming, inpainting (editing sections of music), and remixes (completely reimagining a song). However, I still find that working with half-minute segments provides better control over the music I want to create.
There don't seem to be as many original shows out there that push the imagination envelope. (Yes, there are shows like Rick and Morty, Hilda, and a handful of other great cartoon series out there. But to me there seems to be a void with new original content from the past 2 years.) As an illustrator and character designer, I'm not watching as many cartoons anymore - we need more Adventure Time-like, Steven Universe and Hilda shows to bring back true imaginative storytelling.
Digital Sketch of a slightly small and young Finn from Adventure Time using Adobe Fresco and a charcoal crayon setting, with a limited color pallet
I enjoyed the sequel post-shows and Fiona series on Netflix, and feel there is so much more possible with the characters and history of the original. So, I started imagining a prequel series for Adventure Time. We have seen Finn as a baby, and were given several alternative reality versions of Finn. But I was thinking, what about Finn as a young kid, say 8 years old? That's a perfect age where he is becoming aware of the world, but is still not quite prepared to go out and bravely adventure.
I was thinking he'd be younger, smaller, and more immature. The series could explore the origins of Finn and Jake meeting characters for the first time. It could explain the gear Finn found and uses, such as his backpack and iconic bunny hood. (I know some of Finn's past has been explained, but there is still much left untold. At least, I believe there is... MORE ADVENTURE TIME!... please...)
This song was inspired by the Crosby, Stills Nash and Young style from the '70s.
The song reflects on my past, a friend, and the night John Lennon died.
I was 16 at the time, totally absorbed with music -- as I had been since the age of 12. Any money I was making (or given) was going into buying records (or instruments).
So Long (Classic Rock CSNY)
Flashing back to a bus ride going home after Jr. Highschool, a friend introduced me to a Beach Boys fan. The three of us would talk of our favorite songs and albums, only to find out we were all complete Beatles fans. From then on, that Beach Boy fan and I hung out everyday, listening to old and new music, dreaming of starting a band and writing our own songs.
Years later, the night of Dec. 8th, 1980, would change the world as we knew it (as much as a 16-year-old could comprehend). I still remember that night. I heard someone confirm Lennon's time of death on TV. It was late. Still, I had to call my friend.
His mother answered the phone; she was awoken. I apologized, then told her what had happened -- I said I needed to talk to her son. She understood -- I waited as she went to wake up my friend. Minutes later, he picked up the phone confused. She didn't tell him what happened -- so I did, and told him to put on channel 7. We both watched the news, not saying a word for what seemed to be an hour. We both broke down, breaking the rule of never letting someone know you were crying -- but it didn't matter. Nothing did.
I still remember that night clearly. It changed much in me. Changed my view of all things.
This Dec. 12, 2024, will mark the 10th year of that friend's passing, so these things have been on my mind. Whenever I hear of Lennon being remembered on Dec. 8th, it reminds me of my friend who died so close to that date.
This song is for you Rich.
Created using UDIO's AI technology
Music: "So Long (Classic Rock CSNY)" — lyrics and prompt arrangements by Jim Romer
This time it's done in an Techno-Swing format, inspired by bands like Caravan Palace. This song got over 400 listens on the first 4 days on YouTube; which is surprising since I didn't really promote it or mention it to anyone. I'll be posting more of my AI songs as they get uploaded to YouTube.
My original Techno-Swing song, got many listens on YouTube
WOW! Have things advanced in AI music these past few months!
For the past year, I've been deeply involved in learning, using, and putting together AI websites and programs to work for me as a product designer. The improvements are usually amazing and often happen in large leaps. Graphic generation alone has been mind-blowing. It is not perfect, so much is still hit-and-miss.
As for video generation, it is way too new and early -- and I'm not impressed at the overall look of these seconds-long videos. It needs to be less random; currently, there is no consistency. I find it annoying and boring. But enough about that, let's go back to the music . . .
Okay, here's a song I generated. The songs I create aren't simply left to AI to fully create. I wrote the lyrics, fully described what I wanted to be included in the song, and generally guided the direction of the song in 32 seconds parts. The best way to describe creating AI music is that you are like a producer in a recording studio, keeping the stuff you like and generally saying "Well, that part's not right -- how about doing it this way instead?" "Add a harmonica solo here.", or "add in a 3-part harmony chorus at this point."
My first attempt at doing Crosby, Stills, and Nash song with a cameo appearance of Paul McCartney towards the end
I'm using Udio which allows developing a full song by building half-minute sections at a time. Udio is currently in beta mode as of this writing, its still free to use, BUT, the $10/month is much more worth the time if you really want to generate your own songs. There is a huge random outcome to most of this process. I find I generally need about 12-32 takes to find the 30+ second clips I want.
You might expect a well-known and powerful company like Google to eventually enter the AI competition arena. One could assume that Google has had a major AI-like system for years, used for web searches and information gathering. Or perhaps not? My first impression of Bard, Google's response to ChatGPT, is, "Holy $#%&! This might be the worst AI I've encountered in over a year!"
Let me explain the level of detail I usually expect. As a toy designer, I use AI to help me collect images of toys, conduct market research, and explore styles and color schemes, among other things. Recently, a client requested generic toy robots but wasn't sure about the exact appearance. This is where AI shines, by generating images/mock-ups in a variety of possible styles.
A very traditional cute metal toy robot design - requested in metallic silver without colors
Another variation showing different flocked materials and some color accents
Above are two examples of robot toy designs, created by Dall-E (also known as ChatGPT-4).
I find Dall-E to be the best at "listening" to exactly what I'm asking for in my toy design prompts. Many other image generators tend to overlook key details mentioned in the prompt. Now, let's look at what Google's Bard created. Note: This was done using the exact same prompts I used with Dall-E.
Google . . . I'm speechless. (Was this thing shot in the chest?)
This one's even better. And by "better" I mean worse. Why the colors? Why does it look old, grimy and used.
These things would give nightmares to the Island of Misfit Toys. They do look as if a child created them. The colors are so muted and conflicting. If AI was involved with these designs, I'd like to know how it came to this point. Personally, I feel Google shouldn't have released Bard to the public. They should have kept it closed until their technology was at least on par with the AI world a year ago.
- - - - - UPDATE - - - - - Needed to update with the latest version of the Moldy Bread Monster. All AI generators have been updated several times since the creation of the first image -- so this is now the latest version circa January 2024. I mean, this newer guy is actually made of BREAD! The former dude was more wool-like.
Love, love, love this updated version. Much better mold. The goofy expression has a very Adventure Time/Gravity Falls vibe. The red veins in the eyes are simply priceless. Bravo, AI -- Bravo!
NOTE: These images were not arranged in any level of greatness or priority. I’m gathering the 10 images I feel represent my best AI results in 2023. I hope you find them amusing, interesting, and inspiring too.
Behold, the slice welding Moldy Bread Monster
Meet the Moldy Bread Monster, born on the day there was a half loaf of moldy bread in our kitchen, and I REALLY wanted a sandwich! (Hate when that happens.)
The MidJourney prompt was simple, though I added the word “dancing.” The dancing wasn't quite captured, which often happened with version 4 back then. But the character's uniqueness, especially with it seeming upset about a slice of “good bread” in its left hand gave me a good laugh. (Especially since I was in a similar situation mere hours ago, complaining and holding a “bad slice’ of moldy bread.)
Here are a few of the AI images I generated during 2023 that I felt were interesting enough but didn't make the top 10.
Manic Santa Claus was a popular trend during December, this one was my weirdest
Using someone else's prompt, I edited it to portray Billy Elish as a warped version of the Poison Ivy character, (mostly picked her because she used to sport green hair.) This came out much better than expected.
Red Sonja fighting a gigantic viper creature
This one came out of nowhere! I believe I simply asked for a "Vivid Colorful Santa Hat" for photos of pet costumes. I have NO IDEA why this was the image I got instead. Disturbing.
Another disturbing image, this was "a photo of Humpty Dumpty circa 1910."
A beautiful fantasy city scene. I especially like the warm lighting in the foreground and the insanely doom-inspiring details of the towers in the distance.
There used to be a great website called Illustration Friday. Every Friday, a new word was given, and artists would submit images based on that week's word. For the week when the word was "WORN," I chose to interpret it as "damaged and shabby as a result of much use." Using this definition, I depicted Darth Vader as worn out from a long day. Many years later, I uploaded that image into Leonardo.ai, activated the 3D settings, and received this result:
In less than 20 seconds, my 2D drawing was transformed into a 3D version. The only disappointment was that the smoke trails from the lightsaber looked more like gray wood with stones. However, the Darth Vader character turned out very well, with excellent lighting, reflections, and textures.
The original sketch was digitally drawn within an hour and posted on the Illustration Friday website.
Sometime later, I hand drew the design using brush pens, Copic markers, and a white Gelly Roll pen. This was the image uploaded into Leonardo.ai to be revised by AI technology.