The AI didn’t make this lullaby. The months did. Here’s what happened when the machine finally received it.
Cletus Bear Spuckler took months to build — the country drawl, the Appalachian theology, the honey-warm tenor made for the person who can’t sleep because the year was too heavy. When we fed that voice into Neural Frames with four reference images and ten minutes of render time, the machine gave back something we didn’t expect: a glowing cradle in an empty warehouse. A man standing before it like he was witnessing something sacred. Amber light cutting through concrete dark.
The machine didn’t understand the lullaby. It responded to it. And that distinction is everything.
Take a look at the video. A couple images and a song. Not perfect but pretty impressive for uploading a couple of images a song and hitting “go.“
This is Spirit Songs. This is what making looks like before it becomes finished.
🎵 Listen to Cletus Bear Spuckler on Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube Music 📖
Read the full case study on Substack: [link] 🤝 Learn about Spirit Songs and Humanitarians AI
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TAGS: Cletus Bear Spuckler lullaby, Spirit Songs AI music, Neural Frames AI video, Appalachian country lullaby, AI music video production, audioreactive AI animation, ghost artist AI music, AI-generated music video, country gospel AI, Humanitarians AI music, sleep music AI, AI visual synthesizer, lullaby and goodnight, AI creative process, Musinique AI music
HASHTAGS: #SpiritSongs #AIMusic #CletusBearSpuckler










