An industry first for Christian music
Last updated: June 2026 · This page documents how AI is used across the 1728 franchise
Most music made with AI assistance today carries no disclosure at all. We think that's a mistake — for listeners, for the industry, and for the integrity of the work itself. So we're doing something most artists aren't: publishing exactly how this music was made, what was human, what was machine-assisted, and the theological reasoning behind every creative decision.
Every lyric, every theological decision, every word, and every stylistic direction in the 1728 franchise is authored by Bruno Miranda. Music production — the instrumental arrangement, vocal synthesis, and sound design — is generated using Suno AI, directed by detailed human-written creative specifications for every single track. No lyric, melody concept, or theological idea originates from AI. The AI's role is production execution, not authorship.
This phrase gets used loosely across the music industry right now, so we want to be specific about what it means for this project:
100% human
All song lyrics. All biblical references and theological framing. All thematic concepts. All song titles. All decisions about musical style, tempo, key, and vocal gender. All decisions about what content is acceptable and what isn't.
AI-assisted
Instrumental composition and arrangement. Vocal performance synthesis. Sound design and audio rendering — all generated by Suno AI according to detailed specifications written by the producer for each individual track.
Human, post-production
Every generated track is mixed and mastered by hand using professional studio tools, including manual EQ correction, dynamic processing, and loudness mastering — not simply exported and uploaded.
Every lyric written for this franchise passes through a five-part theological filter before it's considered finished. This isn't a technical AI safeguard — it's a human editorial discipline the producer applies to his own writing, regardless of which tools are used downstream.
Because this franchise pulls from global music styles — EDM, Afrobeats, merengue, UK Garage, and more — we apply a second framework specifically to sound and rhythm, separate from lyrics. Some musical styles carry cultural associations that no lyric, however well-intentioned, can fully override. We evaluate every style choice across three questions:
Trigger specificity
Is the association general cultural familiarity, or does it carry specific trauma-linked memory for listeners?
Cultural proximity
Has this style expanded into broad, mainstream use, or does it still live primarily in spaces dominated by harmful content?
Rhythmic embeddedness
Are the harmful associations baked into the sound itself — the drum pattern, the bass design — at a level that lyrics simply cannot override?
Every style decision across every volume of this franchise is rated on a four-tier scale before it's approved for production:
This is why, for example, certain rhythmic patterns associated specifically with violent or sexually exploitative musical contexts are never used in this franchise, even though the underlying genre family might otherwise fit. A Bible verse over the wrong drum pattern doesn't redeem the drum pattern.
Nobody requires us to publish a page like this. We're doing it because we believe AI-assisted creative work deserves the same kind of transparency listeners expect from ingredient labels, sourcing disclosures, or content ratings in other industries. If this music moves you, you deserve to know exactly how it was made — not as a confession, but as a statement of intent. Every choice on this page was made on purpose.
In accordance with the AI-content disclosure requirements of our distribution partner, every release in the 1728 franchise is flagged appropriately at the point of distribution, reflecting the human-authored, AI-assisted production model described above.
As AI music tools improve and as this franchise expands into new volumes and cultural contexts, this page will be updated to reflect any changes in process, tooling, or standards. We will not quietly change our practices without updating this disclosure.