As the guy who started this subthread, I was joking — but I expect it will come true anyway. The whole industry seems bent on removing humans from the production of all goods and services, so someone somewhere will try to optimize humans out of music and the humanities in general. Whether they succeed is an open question.
Isn’t every industry trying to eliminate human labor? Nothing will prevent humans from making music. Being paid for making recordings was already a dying business model due to digital reproduction making copyright toothless.
The music industry is at least 10 or 20 times older than the concept of copyright. The traditional business model was always about live performance and patronage, and even today that’s where most musicians’ income comes from. The recordings and radio/streaming play could make money, but it was mostly advertisement for the shows and merch. So functionally, the advertising machine is shifting towards making culture a mere commodity, which is a new thing.
The other thing here is that while it is a continuation of industrialization of artisan work like furniture and textiles, we are finally going into the area of commoditizing the work of the artists. Admittedly the split between artisans and artists only happened recently in the Renaissance, but it’s still a different threshold, where culture itself is mechanized. And instead of asking if it is a good idea to take the humanities out of the hands of humans, the only real consideration will be short-term shareholder value.