Dolly Parton Doesn’t Want to Become an AI Hologram After She Dies: ‘I’ll Be Around’

Dolly Parton Doesn’t Want to Become an AI Hologram After She Dies: ‘I’ll Be Around’

According to Dolly Parton, ‘I’ll be around, we’ll find ways to keep me here’

At age 77, Dolly Parton revealed how he doesn’t want them to do posthumous concerts with a hologram of Artificial intelligence (AI) her. It is worth remembering how ABBA It is Whitney Houston were digitally immortalized with presentations of this type.

During a press conference, according to information from the The Independentthe iconic country singer scrapped the idea of ​​wearing AI posthumously. “I feel like I’ve left a lot of work behind. I need to decide how much of this high-tech stuff I want to be involved with, because I don’t want to leave my soul here on this earth,” she said.

I think with some of these things I’ll be grounded here forever. I’ll be around, we’ll find ways to keep me here.


Dolly Parton regrets putting ‘really good music’ in time capsule to 2045

Dolly Parton has unreleased music that fans won’t be able to hear until 2045 – and the singer isn’t happy about the wait. During a recent appearance on the The Kelly ClarksonShowthe country icon spoke about writing the song for DreamMorea resort located in the artist’s theme park, the dollywoodin Pigeon Forge, Tennessee.

Parton revealed this information in the book Songteller: My Life in Lyricspublished in November 2020. The unreleased song was locked in a time capsule and will only be opened in 2045, when the venture will be 30 years old.

A few years after recording the track, however, Parton doesn’t want to wait any longer to share it with listeners. “You have no idea how this bothered me. I want to dig this up so bad. It’s a really good song!”, she vented to kelly clarkson.

Maybe I’m here, maybe not. I don’t know whose damn idea that was. I think it will probably disintegrate and no one will ever hear it, that’s what bothers me. That maybe the recording will rot in there before they open it.”

Even having agreed with the idea, the artist previously spoke in the book Songteller: My Life in Lyrics, which has “difficult” to hide the song from fans. “It’s burning me up inside that I have to let it go,” she confessed. “It’s like burying one of my kids, putting them on ice or something, and I won’t be around to see them brought back to life.”

As pointed out by Consequence of Sound, Dolly Parton may not own the rights to the song, because in December 2020, she told the Music Week about considering following in the footsteps of bob dylan It is Neil Youngwhich sold the rights to the entire discography: “It is very possible that, for business reasons, estate planning and family things, I can sell the catalog I have now.”

Source: Rollingstone

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