A long, weird love letter
Written across years of notes, voice memos, and late-night DAW sessions. Every lyric and melody is human; the voices are synthetic. The stories sit right in the middle.
BAYSGATE stitches bedroom notebooks, pandemic ghosts, and synthetic voices into one alt-pop fever dream. Twenty-nine tracks of neon heartbreak, glitch-soft lullabies, and AI-sung confessions.
A one-man studio project using AI as a strange new instrument — not to replace feeling, but to drag more of it into the light.
Written across years of notes, voice memos, and late-night DAW sessions. Every lyric and melody is human; the voices are synthetic. The stories sit right in the middle.
Think emotional pop songs dragged through a cyberpunk filter: fuzzy bass, clean hooks, glitchy harmonies, and the occasional “did my speaker just break?” moment.
This isn’t “press a prompt and get a song.” It’s old-school songwriting, then funnelled through machines that sing. The questions it raises are part of the art.
When Code Learned to Feel will live on all the usual platforms. The Releases page pulls them together so you don’t have to hunt.
There’s a whole story behind this record: why AI, why now, and what happens when your private sketches end up sung by a synthetic choir.