On Friday evening, award-winning producer Ainsley “Notnice” Morris unveiled the official video for Save Me, the debut single from his groundbreaking AI artiste S’riah (pronounced Soraya), a project that has ignited passionate debate within the music industry and online spaces. The black-and-white visual is nothing short of striking — opening with a solemn aerial shot of a church before cutting to an emotive close-up of S’riah singing. The video weaves together powerful scenes depicting everyday struggles such as family disputes, addiction, loneliness, personal and professional pressures, painting a raw portrait of human vulnerability. At one point, the AI-generated singer even sheds a tear, blurring the line between human expression and digital creation, before the visual closes with a sobering statistic: more than 720,000 people die by suicide annually. The ending drives home a crucial message of hope, directing viewers to Jamaica’s Mental Health and Suicide Prevention helpline, as well as SafeSpot, a child and teen helpline supported by UNICEF and the PSOJ.
While the video’s artistry has been praised for its emotional depth and storytelling, the project itself continues to stir debate. Since announcing S’riah earlier this week, Notnice has faced criticism from some quarters of the creative community, with detractors arguing that opportunities should go to human talent rather than artificial intelligence. One social media user bluntly declared, “If it’s not coming from a human, I’m not digging it.” Yet others have rallied behind the initiative, publicly applauding the bold experiment, while fans credited songwriter Nordia Mothersille for her “elite pen game” in crafting the lyrics.
Addressing the uproar, Notnice has taken a calm but firm stance. “As a producer, I understand the concerns… but I believe it’s important to approach these changes with openness and rationality,” he explained. In a statement from Notnice Records, the team clarified what it means to “sign” an AI artiste: the deal is not with a person but with the creative and technical minds powering the project. The agreement secures rights to the music, image, and digital identity, framing S’riah as a collaborative fusion of human creativity and technology rather than a soulless replacement.
For Notnice, the experiment is rooted in tradition as much as innovation. He likens the shift to earlier transformations in music consumption — from vinyl to CDs, and later streaming. “S’riah is not here to replace human creativity but to complement it,” he emphasised, framing the project as a way to expand storytelling and amplify Jamaican music on a global scale. Importantly, Save Me isn’t a random AI production; it draws inspiration from the late Miss Universe Jamaica finalist Tyra Spaulding’s struggles with mental health. Notnice handled the production, Mothersille penned the lyrics, and the AI voice gave it form — a blend he insists is “innovation anchored in authenticity.”
With the release of Save Me and its poignant visual, Notnice has not only introduced Jamaica’s first major AI artiste but also positioned himself at the heart of a cultural conversation. Whether S’riah’s presence signals a new frontier or remains a controversial experiment, the project forces the industry to confront how far technology can, and should, intertwine with human artistry. For now, Notnice appears confident in his gamble — betting that this bold step could expand, rather than diminish, the soul of Jamaican music.

4 weeks ago
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English (US) ·