YouTube Music tests new AI music hosts
YouTube’s latest experiment adds AI-powered hosts that bring stories, trivia, and commentary to your playlists. Could this be YouTube’s answer to Spotify’s AI DJ?
YouTube Music’s newest experiment
YouTube Music is dipping its toes into the world of AI DJs, the company announced on Friday. The platform is testing out ‘AI music hosts’ that talk you through your favourite tracks, adding fun commentary, relevant stories, and fan trivia.
The tool is being tested in YouTube Labs, but could become a permanent feature for the streaming platform in the future.
What is YouTube Labs?
Think of YouTube Labs as YouTube’s playground for new AI-focused ideas. It’s where YouTube rolls out prototypes and experiments with these AI tools before deciding whether to make them permanent.
While anyone can sign up to test the early features that could shape the future of YouTube, the platform notes it’s only open to “a limited number of US participants”.
You can see if you’re eligible to sign up here.
Why does this matter?
Streaming services have adopted AI for things like recommendations and playlists, including YouTube Music itself. However, Spotify’s AI DJ so far remains the only feature to crack the more personal side of music discovery, by adding context and commentary between tracks.
Now, YouTube’s experiment could look to close that gap. Its new AI host goes beyond its basic ‘Ask Music’ tool that lets users simply type a prompt for AI to throw music back at them. Instead, it gives you a more natural, conversational layer while listening, that might help fans connect with music on a deeper level.
The bigger picture
The move isn’t happening in isolation. YouTube has been leaning into AI across its platform. Just this month at its recent ‘Made on YouTube’ event, the company announced new AI creation tools for Shorts. Meanwhile, its ‘Jump Ahead’ feature uses AI to help Premium users on TV skip to the most interesting parts of videos.
What this means for artists
For musicians, this is where it gets exciting. AI hosts could highlight stories about you, your songs, or your albums, giving fans extra content they might not find elsewhere. That means more opportunities for fans to learn about you after the initial music discovery.
The result could lead to a deeper connection between artists and listeners. And in an industry where fan engagement is everything, that could be huge.
Final thoughts
As more AI tools become integrated with music streaming, platforms are slowly reshaping how fans interact and engage with the music they love.
For YouTube Music, AI music hosts are just an experiment for now. But if they get it right, it could just be the next digital DJ in your pocket.