In a new biography of Elon Musk , written by Walter Isaacson, Elon Musk announced that he and Grimes are having a third child. The existence of their new baby, named Techno Mechanicus, or Tao for short, has remained a secret until now. Similarly, Musk and Grimes waited months to announce their second child, Exa Dark Sideroel Musk, in 2022. Their first child, X Æ A-12, or X, was born in 2020.
Grimes and Elon Musk first went public with their relationship at the Met Gala in 2018. In 2021, the couple announced that they were "half-separated." In a new biography of Musk, Grimes describes the way he handles his anger as "demon mode." She goes on to say that it "causes a lot of chaos," but it also allows her to be productive.
Musk has 10 children from three women, including Siobhan Zillis, the director of Neuralink, who reports directly to him. Author Isaacson wrote that Zelis gave birth to twins in 2021 after Musk offered to become a sperm donor so that "the children would be genetically his." "He really wants smart people to have babies," Zillis explained in his autobiography. This happened while Grimes was expecting a second child for the billionaire. Musk would not have told him that he had twins with one of his employees.
“Tell Sivan to unblock me and tell Elon to let me see my son or respond to my lawyer,” Grimes wrote in a now-deleted message to Isaacson on X (the Musk-owned platform formerly known as Twitter ) last week. “Until now I was not even allowed to see a photo of these children, even though this situation has completely destroyed my family.”
Grimes' latest album , Miss Anthropocene, was released in 2020. Since then, she has shared new songs such as "I Wanna Be Software," "Welcome to the Opera," "Shinigami Eyes," and "Player of Games." Grimes also revealed software that can imitate her voice, offering between 50 and 50 royalties for commercial use to artists who use it.
Musicians are already using artificial intelligence more than we think
This goes beyond the rise of deepfakes and ChatGPT. Artificial intelligence tools will and are already changing the way music is created.
Originally published on Pitchfork
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