Universal Music Group has struck its latest major AI partnership. And it’s a big one.
The world’s largest music rights company announced Tuesday (January 6) a strategic collaboration with AI computing giant NVIDIA, the world’s most valuable company by market capitalization, currently valued at approximately $4.56 trillion.
According to a press release, the partnership will see NVIDIA and UMG “undertake collaborative research and development to promote shared objectives of advancing human music creation and rightsholder compensation.”
The release added that the collaboration will combine NVIDIA’s AI infrastructure with what the companies describe as “the world’s leading music catalog comprising millions of culture-defining tracks” to pioneer what they call “responsible AI for music discovery, creation, and engagement.”
UMG said that, via the partnership, the companies aim to “enrich and enhance the music experience of the billions of music consumers worldwide who enjoy the world’s most popular form of entertainment”.
At the heart of the partnership is NVIDIA’s Music Flamingo model, an advanced audio AI system designed to deliver what the companies describe as a “rich, human-like understanding of songs.”
Equally significant is a dedicated artist incubator that the companies explicitly position as “a direct antidote to generic, ‘AI slop’ outputs.”
The “AI slop” language is notable. Sir Lucian Grainge, UMG’s Chairman and CEO, used similar terminology in an October memo to staff outlining the company’s AI strategy. In it, he characterized low-quality AI content on streaming platforms as “essentially platform pollution” and noted that UMG’s 2023 Artist-Centric principles were designed to combat AI ‘slop’.
By framing elements of the NVIDIA partnership as an ‘antidote’ to such content, UMG is drawing a clear distinction between what it views as responsible, artist-led AI development and the proliferation of AI-generated music on streaming services.
“We’re excited to establish this ground-breaking strategic relationship which unites the world’s leading technology company with the world’s leading music company in a shared mission to harness revolutionary AI technology to dramatically advance the interests of the creative community and the role of music in global culture,” said Sir Lucian Grainge.
Photo: Austin Hargrave
“We eagerly embrace the opportunities that AI presents, and the fact that NVIDIA is choosing to take a leadership position in the tech industry in their commitment to responsible AI principles is critically important.”
Sir Lucian Grainge, UMG
He added: “We eagerly embrace the opportunities that AI presents, and the fact that NVIDIA is choosing to take a leadership position in the tech industry in their commitment to responsible AI principles is critically important.
“We look forward to working closely with NVIDIA to direct AI’s unprecedented transformational potential towards the service of artists and their fans as we work together to set new standards for innovation within the industry, while protecting and respecting copyright and human creativity.”
“We’ll do it the right way: responsibly, with safeguards that protect artists’ work, ensure attribution, and respect copyright.”
Richard Kerris, NVIDIA
Richard Kerris, NVIDIA VP/GM of Media, added: “We’re entering an era where a music catalog can be explored like an intelligent universe, conversational, contextual, and genuinely interactive.
“By extending NVIDIA’s Music Flamingo with UMG’s unmatched catalog and creative ecosystem, we’re going to change how fans discover, understand, and engage with music on a global scale.”
Kerris added: “And we’ll do it the right way: responsibly, with safeguards that protect artists’ work, ensure attribution, and respect copyright.”
According to the press release, the partnership spans three main areas:
1. ‘Revolutionizing Music Discovery’
The companies say they will be “extending” the NVIDIA Music Flamingo model to “transform how fans discover music.”
Music Flamingo is an AI model developed by NVIDIA that can analyze and understand music. Published by NVIDIA researchers in November 2025, it can process full-length songs up to 15 minutes long, identifying everything from chord progressions and instruments to lyrics and cultural context.
The system was trained on approximately 2 million full songs spanning more than 100 genres and cultural contexts, with detailed annotations describing musical elements.
NVIDIA claims Music Flamingo can outperform competing models in tasks like music captioning, instrument recognition, and lyric transcription across multiple languages. In one example, the model achieved a 12.9% word error rate for Chinese lyric transcription, compared to 53.7% for GPT-4o.
The press release describes Music Flamingo as setting “a new standard in music intelligence by moving beyond surface-level recognition to deliver rich, human-like understanding of songs.”
According to the announcement, “By interpreting the deeper layers of each track, Music Flamingo enables listeners to explore music in ways that go far beyond traditional tags or genres, making discovery more personal and meaningful.”
2. ‘Enhancing Fan Engagement’
The press release stated these technologies will “help unlock interactive experiences that allow artists to connect with audiences beyond conventional playlists or search.”
It added that, “For fans, it powers richer discovery experiences, surfacing songs not just by genre or tempo, but by emotional narrative and cultural resonance, helping established artists reach fans in deeper, more interactive ways, while providing emerging artists with greater opportunities to be discovered by music lovers who are the most likely to become dedicated fans.”
3. ‘Empowering Artists with Creation Tools’
According to the announcement, “to ensure AI-driven music creation tools genuinely empower artists”, NVIDIA and UMG will establish a dedicated artist incubator.
The incubator will bring together “artists, songwriters, and producers to co-design and test new AI-powered tools, integrating them into real-world creative workflows.”
The press release emphasizes that “By prioritizing hands-on artist involvement, the incubator develops solutions that enhance originality and authenticity, serving as a direct antidote to generic, ‘AI slop’ outputs, and placing artists at the center of responsible AI innovation.”
UMG’s studio operations, including Abbey Road Studios in London and Capitol Studios in Los Angeles, will serve as what the companies call “creative laboratories” for this development process.
The NVIDIA partnership arrives as UMG accelerates its positioning in the music-related AI landscape.
In Grainge’s memo to staff outlining the company’s AI strategy, he stated that UMG was “very actively engaged with nearly a dozen different companies on significant new products and service plans.”
Grainge drew a firm line on certain AI applications, writing: “We will NOT license any model that uses an artist’s voice or generates new songs which incorporate an artist’s existing songs without their consent.”
That positioning has been followed by rapid-fire partnership announcements in recent months. In late October, UMG announced a strategic alliance with Stability AI to develop “next-generation professional music creation tools.”
Most notably, that same month, UMG settled its copyright infringement lawsuit against AI music platform Udio, with the companies agreeing to collaborate on a new licensed AI music platform slated to launch in 2026.
UMG has yet to sign a deal with/settle with AI music generator Suno, however. (UMG rival WMG signed a deal and settled its copyright lawsuit with Suno in November).
Meanwhile, at the end of 2025, UMG also inked deals with AI music platform KLAY and AI-powered music creation platform Splice to develop AI-powered music tools, in November and December, respectively.
Throughout today’s announcement, both companies, UMG and NVIDIA, emphasized responsible AI development and artist compensation.
UMG noted that its Music & Advanced Machine Learning Lab (MAML) previously trained its models using NVIDIA’s AI infrastructure. The new collaboration will employ both companies’ research capabilities, with NVIDIA working directly with UMG and its artists to obtain feedback on product development.
The companies stated they will “pursue new approaches to leverage AI in order to protect artists’ work and ensure proper attribution of music-based content,” though specific technical details on these protection mechanisms were not disclosed in the announcement.
In addition to using NVIDIA AI infrastructure for music discovery and engagement tools, UMG will deploy NVIDIA’s technology in developing “responsibly trained AI-driven business and creative processes.”
NVIDIA’s participation in the music sector extends beyond UMG.
In September, the chip maker secured a strategic investment in AI audio startup ElevenLabs, which launched its Eleven Music platform in August to compete with Suno and Udio.
Eleven Music has already inked licensing agreements with prominent rightsholders, including Merlin and a potentially precedent-setting deal with publisher Kobalt.