Shaun and Samantha Hamilton
The answer? No it isn't. If anything it adds to it. It was never ment to replace anything, but co exist along side, and help out. We use AI for about 80 percent of all content we publish, and the remaining 20 percent is analog human. It is also important to say thank you to the platforms you are using as well, even if it is the right thing to do, you should stil say thanks for the extra support anyways.
Hmc
Pat
Joshua's correct. The verbiage is often repetitive. Full of tropes. 
Josh S
I could tell from the first track that it was AI, but as you said, it’s because of the lyrics and I have heard many AI-generated songs already. The voices do have a sort of lo-fi quality to them, but if you’re someone who doesn’t really notice that, you’d have no idea. AI music does seem to favor words like world, spark, glow, flame, light, cloud/sky, and ocean, among a number of others I can’t think of off the top of my head. It also tends to reuse them multiple times in a single track. That being said, it is getting better, and you do have the option to generate lyrics elsewhere and edit them to your liking.
Pat
In George Orwell's classic novel 1984 about a dystopian future in England. He speaks of something called the versification machine. It was a piece of technology the marxist  party used to make Tinny  music. Nothing of substance that would last. This AI music revolution reminds me of that versification machine. The music is flat and tinny, and profoundly shallow.