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AI revives the voice of Edith Piaf for the biographical film "After The Beatles".

AI revives the voice of Edith Piaf for the biographical film "After The Beatles".

AI revives the voice of Edith Piaf for the biographical film "After The Beatles".

Warner Music and the legacy of Edith Piaf have announced that the new biopic about the singer's life will use artificial intelligence to allow the French star to tell her own story. The film, titled "Edith," is in the "final stages of development," according to sources close to Warner Music France, but a release date has not been set yet.

In an attempt to create an "innovative and revolutionary technological project using artificial intelligence to recreate the voice and image of Edith Piaf", it was noted that this is happening60 years after the singer's death.

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This move also followed the success of the latest release from the "Beatles" group called "Now And Then", which thanks to a little artificial intelligence help last week soared to the top of the British charts after54 years.

Artificial intelligence helped isolate the voice of the late John Lennon from a recording he made in 1978, two years before his death. Two of the remaining members of the Beatles - Paul McCartney, 81, and Ringo Starr, 83 - completed work on the song "Now And Then" last year, incorporating guitar parts from the late George Harrison, recorded in 1995.

For the singer of French classic hits "La vie en rose" and "Non, je ne regrette rien," artificial intelligence will use hundreds of audio and video fragments, some of which are over 80 years old, to recreate her unique style and "enhance the authenticity and emotional power of her story." Original recordings will be used for her greatest hits, the company Warner reported.

The 90-minute film will be based on events that took place in Paris and New York from 1920 to 1960 and will be narrated in the voice of the singer herself, revealing previously unknown "aspects of her life."

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