Nov 19 (Reuters) - Suno said on Wednesday it has raised
$250 million in a funding round led by Menlo Ventures, valuing
the artificial intelligence music company at $2.45 billion, as
it aims to develop more sophisticated tools for song creation.
The Massachusetts-based company allows users to generate
songs via AI prompts, but has been caught in a copyright dispute
with record labels such as Warner Music Group ( WMG ), Universal
Music Group and Sony Music Group.
Suno's series C funding round also saw participation from
Nvidia's ( NVDA ) venture capital arm NVentures, Hallwood Media,
Lightspeed, and Matrix.
The music industry is seeing an increase in AI-generated
songs which are hard to distinguish from human-made music. The
trend was highlighted earlier this year when the AI band "The
Velvet Sundown" had attracted one million Spotify ( SPOT )
listeners monthly.
The trend could reshape how platforms monetize songs and
pay artists, while raising ethical and copyright concerns.
"In just two years, we've seen millions of people make their
ideas a reality through Suno, from first-time creators to top
songwriters and producers integrating the tool into their daily
workflows," Suno co-founder and CEO Mikey Shulman said.
Rising popularity of AI tools is drawing investor attention
toward startups that can generate new content and revenue lines.
Last month, Universal Music Group settled a
copyright case with another AI music company Udio. The two
companies plan to launch an AI-powered music creation platform
in 2026, using licensed music to train the tool.