Artificial intelligence is no longer sitting on the edges of the music business. A recent Billboard industry list points to a group of companies that are already shaping how music will be created, licensed, and distributed in the coming years.
One of the most visible players is Suno, which offers tools that let users generate complete songs from text prompts, including vocals and instrumentation. Udio, founded by former Google DeepMind researchers, has also gained attention for its generative music platform and rapid adoption among creators experimenting with AI-assisted songwriting.
On the business and rights side, Klay Vision has taken a licensed-first approach, building AI models trained on music cleared through agreements with major record labels. Meanwhile, ElevenLabs has expanded from voice technology into music projects that blend AI tools with human-led production.


