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Is Sienna Rose, the popular singer with no public face, an AI artist?

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Streaming service Deezer, which has built systems to spot computer-made songs, says many of Rose’s tracks on its platform are flagged as machine-created.

(Web Desk) - Sienna Rose is having a remarkable run. Three of her smoky, jazz-tinged soul tracks have climbed into Spotify’s Viral Top 50. The most popular, a soft-focus ballad called Into The Blue, has passed five million plays.

On the numbers alone, she looks like one of the year’s breakout artists. But there is a problem. Everything about her points to someone who may not exist at all.

A star with no footprint

Streaming service Deezer, which has built systems to spot computer-made songs, says many of Rose’s tracks on its platform are flagged as machine-created.

A glance at her profile raises eyebrows. There are no gigs, no interviews, no videos and no active social media. Her Instagram page, now deactivated, once showed a run of near-identical headshots, all washed in the glossy, unreal light often seen in computer-generated images. Her output is just as unusual. Between 28 September and 5 December she released at least 45 tracks.

An AI artist named Sienna Rose has 3 songs getting streamed in the Spotify top 50 and I'm pretty sure nobody knows it's an AI artist Selena Gomez just posted one of the songs on her Instagram for the Golden Globes pic.twitter.com/UVNfuXRCLq

— Ahmed/The Ears/IG: BigBizTheGod (@big_business_) January 13, 2026

Even Prince, famous for relentless creativity, would have struggled to match that pace. On Tidal, she is also credited with folk and ambient albums, released last year, each with different singers pictured on the artwork. The sound that gives it away.

Musically, tracks like Into The Blue and Breathe Again sit comfortably beside Norah Jones or Alicia Keys: smooth vocals, jazzy guitar, gentle rhythms.

But many listeners say something feels off.

Play Under The Rain or Breathe Again and a faint hiss runs through the song. That noise is common in tracks made with apps like Suno or Udio, which begin with static and gradually shape it into music.

Deezer says this “noise” makes such songs easy to spot. Gabriel Meseguer-Brocal, one of its senior researchers, explains that when layers are added, small errors appear.

“They’re not something you hear as mistakes,” he says. “But with a few mathematical checks, they stand out clearly.”

Those errors act like a fingerprint, even pointing to which software made the track.

For casual listeners, the clues are simpler: flat lyrics, stiff rhythms and a singer who never pushes the melody.

TikTok critic Elosi57 said: “I liked it, but it felt ‘uncanny’. I looked at the profile and thought, ‘This isn’t real.’”

Another user on X wrote that after listening to Olivia Dean, Spotify suggested Sienna Rose: “It sounded similar, but more bland. After a few songs I realised it wasn’t human.” Broadcaster Gemma Cairney summed it up on Radio 4: “The photos look a bit unreal. And in the music, is some of the soul in soul missing?”

Despite the doubts, many listeners embraced her.

Pop star Selena Gomez even used Rose’s track Where Your Warmth Begins in an Instagram post about the Golden Globes. The song was later removed once questions about Rose spread online, but Gomez’s post pushed the mystery into the spotlight.

As for Sienna Rose, her songs continue to rack up plays. Whether she is shy, fictional or something in between, her success shows how hard it has become to tell where human creativity ends – and something else begins. 

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