Dallas Little sits in Greenville, South Carolina, orchestrating something unprecedented: fake musicians dominating real charts. His AI-generated blues singer “Eddie Dalton” doesn’t exist, yet reportedly occupies eleven spots on iTunes’ top 100 singles chart. Position 3, 8, 15, 22, and seven others—all synthetic soul from a non-existent artist.
Little isn’t alone in this chart manipulation. “IngaRose,” another AI-generated R&B artist likely connected to Little’s operation, reportedly holds iTunes’ number one position with “Celebrate Me.” Her Instagram bio reads “Human written lyrics, Real stories. Stems & arrangement refined using Suno”—a rare moment of transparency in an otherwise opaque system.
The Technology Making This Possible
Suno transforms text prompts into radio-ready tracks indistinguishable from human productions.
The platform behind this phenomenon, Suno, generates complete songs from simple text descriptions. Vocals, arrangements, even artwork—all produced without human musicians touching an instrument. Little feeds prompts into the system and releases the results as “Eddie Dalton” tracks.
One song, “Another Day Old,” has reportedly accumulated 1.2 million YouTube views despite the artist being pure fiction.
Chart Success Without Sales
Massive chart presence translates to surprisingly low actual purchases.
The disconnect between visibility and revenue reveals something troubling about modern music metrics. According to reports citing Luminate data, Eddie Dalton’s entire catalog has sold only 6,900 tracks since inception—yet maintains dominant chart positions across multiple platforms.
IngaRose reportedly boasts 228,000 Instagram followers, suggesting sophisticated audience building around artificial personas.
Platform Response Evolving
Major streaming services are implementing AI transparency measures after initially having no restrictions.
The landscape is shifting rapidly. Apple Music recently introduced AI transparency tags requiring labels to disclose artificial content in metadata. The UK’s Voluntary Code of Good Practice on Transparency in Music Streaming, which went live in July 2024, establishes industry standards for distinguishing AI-generated material.
Yet gaps remain. These new policies rely on voluntary disclosure, and enforcement varies across platforms.
The implications extend beyond novelty. Every chart position occupied by AI-generated content potentially displaces human artists competing for the same attention and revenue streams. Like deepfakes infiltrating social media, synthetic music now infiltrates your playlists—though transparency requirements are finally emerging to help you tell the difference.




























