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Gardeners and plant lovers: 15 things to learn and do in SoCal this month

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Gardeners and plant lovers: 15 things to learn and do in SoCal this month

It’s February, when plant-related lessons and walks are blooming throughout Southern California — each romantic and educational. Nonetheless, you might want to act quick for those who plan to register for these occasions because the variety of contributors is restricted.

Only a reminder too that February remains to be time to begin an orchard in your backyard, or perhaps a container, for those who purchase dwarf fruit bushes designed for small areas. Many native nurseries nonetheless have bare-root fruit bushes obtainable — one of the simplest ways to get your fruit bounty began.

It’s a good suggestion to purchase from native nurseries to get a range that grows nicely in your area. That’s as a result of apples, pears and gentle fruits like peaches and cherries require a sure variety of chill hours — hours when the temperature is between 32 and 45 levels — to supply fruit. The California Uncommon Fruit Growers web site lists nurseries that promote a big number of fruit bushes, but it surely’s not full, so remember to test the choices at nurseries close to your own home.

Right here’s our newest listing of plant and backyard occasions within the L.A. space into early March. E-mail garden- and plant-related occasions to jeanette.marantos@latimes.com at the very least three weeks earlier than they occur, and we would embody them within the calendar.

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Feb. 4
California Native Container Crops — a category about rising native vegetation in pots — taught by Flora Ito, nursery gross sales supervisor on the Theodore Payne Basis nursery, 10459 Tuxford St. in Solar Valley, from 9 to 10:15 a.m. Members should have proof of full vaccination in opposition to COVID-19 or a adverse COVID-19 PCR check taken inside 72 hours of the category. Masks are required indoors and out. Register on-line, $25, or $20 for members. eventbrite.com

Feb. 5
Celebrating Citrus with Riverside County grasp gardener Lucy Heyming from 10 a.m. to midday on the Land Use Studying Heart, 4500 Glenwood Drive in Riverside. Heyming will define Riverside’s citrus historical past (house of the state’s first navel orange tree) and supply steering on the care of citrus and updates on Huanglongbing (HLB or citrus greening illness). It’s a part of the Riverside-Corona Useful resource Conservation District’s free “Ask a UC Grasp Gardener” program the primary Saturday of each month on the heart, a 3-acre demonstration backyard for sustainable rising practices for native plant habitats, city plantings and agriculture. Registration isn’t required. rcrcd.org/applications

Feb. 6
Who’s Consuming My Backyard?, a category on the Prepare dinner’s Backyard, 1033 Abbot Kinney Blvd. in Venice, from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. will concentrate on natural pest management and efficient fertilizing. The category begins with a lecture and ends with a hands-on expertise within the farm’s manufacturing beds. Members have to be absolutely vaccinated in opposition to COVID-19 and current a vaccination card on the door. thecooksgardenvenice.com

Feb. 8
Secrets and techniques of a Wholesome Vegetable Backyard, a free workshop sponsored by the Orange County Natural Gardening Membership and taught by Julie Bawden-Davis, grasp gardener and writer of “Southern California Vegetable Gardening,” at 7:30 p.m. within the Orange County Fairgrounds Silo Constructing, 88 Truthful Drive in Costa Mesa. fb.com/teams

Feb. 11-12
Crops & Romance at San Diego Botanic Backyard opens the California Gardenscapes for a night stroll, illuminated by twinkle lights, outside fireplace pits and reside classical guitar music, from 5:30 to eight at 230 Quail Gardens Drive in Encinitas. Advance registration is required, and guests can pattern free goodies contained in the conservatory (the place masks are required). Admission is $22 ($18 for seniors, navy and grownup members, $14 for ages 3-17, $10 for members ages 3-17 and free for youngsters underneath age 3). A $60 candy and glowing memento package deal containing two Champagne flutes with the backyard brand, two glasses of glowing wine or juice, a field of Chuao Chocolatier goodies and an air plant can be obtainable if bought by Feb. 7. sdbgarden.org

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Feb. 12-13
Southern California Camellia Society’s forty ninth Camellia Present on the Huntington Library, Artwork Museum, and Botanical Gardens, 1151 Oxford Street, San Marino, from 1 to five p.m. Feb. 12 and 10 a.m. to five p.m. Feb. 13. Most of the people might enter camellia blooms for judging from 7 to 10:30 a.m. Feb. 12. The present is free to guests after $29 admission to the gardens ($24 for seniors 65 and older, energetic navy and college students with ID, $13 ages 4-11. Members and kids underneath age 4 enter free.) Masks are required indoors. socalcamelliasociety.org

Feb. 14
Bawdy Botany for Adults on the L.A. Arboretum, an adult-only night time hike “to find the fascinating botany of affection and lust,” as within the botanic origins of the contraception capsule or why we give roses to our sweethearts, from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at 301 N. Baldwin Ave. in Arcadia. Members have to be 18 or older and register on-line. Members ought to arrive 10 minutes early; late arrivals is not going to be permitted to hitch the group. Word that the identical occasion on Feb. 12 has already bought out. Tickets are $25 ($20 for members). arboretum.org

Feb. 15-19
Theodore Payne Basis Winter Plant Sale on the basis’s nursery, 10459 Tuxford St. in Solar Valley, from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. The sale contains native seeds, books and different merchandise, in addition to one of many area’s largest picks of native vegetation. Members obtain a 15% low cost, and nonmembers get a ten% low cost on all vegetation, seeds and basis gear. Masks are required on the grounds. Admission is free, however buyers should preregister for particular dates and instances. Every reservation is for one automobile with as much as 4 passengers (who don’t have to make separate reservations). eventbrite.com

Feb. 19
Apple Grafting Workshop with grasp grafter Arnold Bernstein at Ganna Walska Lotusland on Chilly Spring Street in Montecito from 9 to 11:30 a.m. The category explains the best way to graft a fascinating department or bud to a appropriate new tree to supply fruit from the dad or mum tree, a course of used to supply a lot of the fruit we devour. On this hands-on workshop, contributors will graft and take house a semi-dwarf producing apple tree, appropriate for the coastal local weather. All supplies can be supplied. Masks are required for the workshop. Register on-line. $125 ($95 for Lotusland members). Within the occasion of heavy rain, the category can be canceled. lotusland.org

Feb. 19-20
Pacific Camellia Society sixteenth Present at Descanso Gardens, 1418 Descanso Drive, La Cañada Flintridge, from 1 to 4:30 p.m. Feb. 19 and 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Feb. 20. Most of the people might enter camellia blooms for judging from 7 to 10:30 a.m. Feb. 19. The present is free to guests after $15 admission to the gardens ($11 for seniors 65 and older and college students with ID, $5 for youngsters ages 5-12. Members and kids underneath age 5 enter free). Masks are required indoors. americancamellias.com

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Feb. 20
The best way to Develop a Cocktail-Impressed Backyard, a category supplied by the South Coast Botanic Backyard, 26300 Crenshaw Blvd. in Rolling Hills Estates, is taught by Terry Huang, the backyard’s director of residing collections, studying and engagement. Members will study the trick to rising and harvesting the specialty herbs, spices and edible flowers that make scrumptious cocktails and mocktails. They’ll additionally take part in a seasonal cocktail glad hour with drinks handcrafted by the backyard’s mixologist. The category prices $50 ($40 for members) and contains normal admission to the backyard and two craft cocktails/mocktails. southcoastbotanicgarden.org

Crystal Cove State Park Discipline Journey, sponsored by the Orange County chapter of the California Native Plant Society, a 4.5-mile stroll led by Lana Nguyen, a California State Parks biologist, via one of many main coastal watersheds of the San Joaquin Hills. Members will study in regards to the native vegetation within the canyon’s coastal sage scrub and grassland areas, beginning at 8 a.m. on the Decrease Moro Canyon Day Use parking space. The three- to four-hour stroll has gradual elevation modifications and one steep hill. The stroll is free and open to the primary 20 who register. A $15 State Parks entrance charge is required for parking. Members ought to put on mountaineering footwear, a hat and sunscreen, and produce water, a digicam and a wildflower ebook or notepad. house.occnps.org

Feb. 25-March 6
Tomatomania! at Roger’s Gardens, 2301 San Joaquin Hills Street in Corona del Mar, from 9 a.m. to six p.m. every day. That is Tomatomania’s first occasion of the 2022 tomato rising season, providing greater than 100 types of peppers and 250 types of heirloom and hybrid tomato vegetation— together with its Tomato of the Yr “Bronze Torch,” a brick-red, grape-style fruit with darkish inexperienced and gold striping. Tomato vegetation might be pre-ordered on-line Feb. 4-20. rogersgardens.com

Feb. 26
Nature Immersion Stroll at Taft Gardens in Ojai, led by Elena Rios, an authorized nature and forest remedy information, from 8:45 to 11 a.m. The two-mile stroll begins with a greeting and introduction circle and takes contributors past the cultivated components of the backyard into the 200-acre Taft Gardens Nature Protect, ending with a ceremony sharing tea comprised of the native vegetation foraged from the world. This can be a gradual stroll with a reasonable incline over rocky terrain, with none benches or chairs, so contributors are welcome to carry their very own light-weight tenting stools or yoga mats in the event that they don’t need to sit on the bottom. Tickets are $35, and advance registration is required. taftgardens.org

Feb. 26-27
Southern California Camellia Council 62nd Spring Camellia Present at Descanso Gardens, 1418 Descanso Drive, La Cañada Flintridge, from 1 to 4:30 p.m. Feb. 26 and 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Feb. 27. This present is a joint occasion involving the area’s 4 camellia societies in Kern and San Diego counties, in addition to the Pacific Camellia Society and the Southern California Camellia Society. Most of the people might enter camellia blooms for judging from 7 to 10:30 a.m. Feb. 26. The present is free to guests after $15 admission to the gardens ($11 for seniors 65 and older and college students with ID, $5 for youngsters ages 5-12. Members and kids underneath age 5 enter free). Masks are required indoors. socalcamelliasociety.org

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Writer Ted Chiang on AI and grappling with big ideas

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Writer Ted Chiang on AI and grappling with big ideas

Ted Chiang was recently awarded the PEN/Faulkner Foundation’s prize for short story excellence.

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Alan Berner

Science fiction author Ted Chiang wishes he could write faster.

His entire body of work from the last 34 years almost completely fits into two book-length collections of short stories, and he says he feels the pressure that many writers do — to be more prolific.

“I can’t claim any moral high ground or deliberate strategy. It’s mostly just that I’m just a very slow writer,” Chiang said.

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But each of his stories is meticulously crafted, the result of big philosophical questions that gnaw at him for months or even years. And he is no stranger to success: His novella-length “Story of Your Life” was the basis of the film Arrival. Many of his works have won science fiction’s highest accolades and prizes.

Chiang recently added another prestigious award to that list. He is the recipient of this year’s PEN/Malamud Award, which celebrates “excellence in the short story.”

Chiang sat down with All Things Considered host Scott Detrow to talk about his writing process, the philosophical ideas that undergird science fiction and why he doesn’t think AI is capable of making art.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Ted Chiang's “Story of Your Life” was the basis of the film Arrival.

Ted Chiang’s “Story of Your Life” was the basis of the film Arrival.

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Interview highlights

Scott Detrow: I want to start really broadly because I think so many of your stories seem to be asking big questions, whether it’s how humans would behave when they encounter a disruptive new technology, or an alien race, or the physical presence of God. But then all the stories come back to the human reaction to that, as opposed to the existential problem itself. When you’re coming up with these stories, do you start with the big question? Do you start with the character? Where does your mind typically drift first?

Ted Chiang: I usually start with what you would call “the big question.” I am interested in philosophical questions, but I think that thought experiments are often very abstract, and it can be somewhat hard for people to engage with them. What science fiction is good at is, it offers a way to dramatize thought experiments. The way it happens for me is that ideas come and ideas go. But when an idea keeps recurring to me over a period of time, months or sometimes years, that is an indicator to me that I should pay more attention to this idea, that this idea is gnawing at me. The only way for me to really get it to stop gnawing at me is to write a story.

Detrow: In the last year or so, you’ve published a series of articles in The New Yorker taking a critical look at AI and often making arguments that this is being framed the wrong way when popular culture talks about artificial intelligence [or] large language models like ChatGPT. What is it about AI in this moment that interests you?

Chiang: As a science fiction writer, I’ve always had a certain interest in artificial intelligence. But as someone who studied computer science in college, I’ve always been acutely aware of the vast chasm between science-fictional depictions of AI and the reality of AI. I think the companies who are trying to sell you AI benefit from blurring this distinction. They want you to think that they are selling a kind of science-fictional vision of your superhelpful robot butler. But the technology they have is so radically unlike what science fiction has traditionally depicted.

Detrow: In one of these essays that I think perhaps got the most attention, you were making the argument that AI is not going to be making great art. Can you walk us through your thinking, your argument about the fact that ChatGPT probably isn’t going to write a great novel or DALL-E is not going to be creating really valuable fundamental works of art?

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Chiang: So the premise of generative AI is that you, as the user, expend very little effort, and then you get a high-quality output. You might enter a short prompt, and then you get a long piece of text, like a short story or maybe a novel. Or you enter a short prompt, and then you get a highly detailed image, like a painting. You cannot specify a lot in a short text prompt. An artist needs to have control of every aspect of a painting. A writer needs to have control over every sentence in a novel. And you simply cannot have control over every sentence in a novel if all you gave was a pretty short text prompt.

Detrow: Tying this back to your fictional work, I think a lot of your stories will propose a new innovation or a scientific discovery that just rocks the society that it comes upon. Is it fair to say that, at least when we’re talking about generative AI, when we’re talking about AI in the current conversation, is it fair to say that you do not see it as that kind of game-changing development?

Chiang: I think that generative AI will have massive repercussions, not because it is fundamentally a transformative tool, but because companies will be quick to adopt it as a way of cutting costs. And by the time they realize that it is not actually that effective, they may have destroyed entire industries. But in the meantime, they might have made a lot of short-term money. And it costs thousands or millions of people their jobs.

Detrow: There are these big societal changes in your pieces. But in a lot of the stories, the main character won’t necessarily change that much of their identity. Whatever massive shift is happening seems just kind of to confirm their sense of purpose or their sense of identity. I’m wondering how you think about that, and if you think that’s maybe a hopeful takeaway from some of these stories.

Chiang: So, I would say that big technological changes, they often will demand that we kind of rethink a lot of things, but they don’t automatically change our fundamental values. If you loved your children before, you should continue to love your children — there’s no technological advance that will make you think, “Oh, actually, loving my children, I guess I’m going to discard that idea.” So, I wouldn’t say that the characters are unaffected or that they just go on being the same. It’s more that they hopefully find some way to live, which allows them to be faithful to their core beliefs, their core values, even in the face of a world that has changed in a very unexpected way.

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I got a butt massage by an AI robot in L.A. Here’s how it went

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I got a butt massage by an AI robot in L.A. Here’s how it went

My first meeting with Aescape, the AI-powered massage robot, was benign enough — if a bit eerie. As if HAL had gotten a job in the Valley. I stepped into the austere spa room at Pause, a wellness center in Studio City, and a sturdy massage table commanded the space. It was deep-sea blue and plush, glowing from LED lights that lined its base. Its enormous, sculpted robot arms promised a unique spa experience.

Yes, I was about to get a transformative butt massage by an AI-powered masseuse.

Aescape sparked a media frenzy when it debuted in New York in August at a handful of Equinox gyms. This week, it arrives in Los Angeles. Aescape will open its robotic arms for business Friday at Pause.

I got a sneak peek, however, the day before Thanksgiving. Upon arrival, I slipped into specialized compression wear that the Aescape company provided for optimal friction; no oil is required for this massage.

After lying on the table belly down, my face nestled into a padded cradle, I selected my playlist on a touch screen (beach house to start, then relaxing piano music). I quickly forgot about the overhead depth sensors and surrounding robotics and drifted into calm. And although I longed for the intimacy of a human masseuse, I found it to be a surprisingly decent session. Here’s how things went.

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The Aescape massage table.

(Christina House / Los Angeles Times)

First, four high-resolution infrared sensors took a 3D scan of my body from above, mapping 1.2 million data points — every curve and asymmetric point on my frame, much to my chagrin — so Aescape could pinpoint where I was on the table and better target my specific body parts. Then its hulking robot arms reached up and around my torso, before beginning to massage me.

Aescape has heated “hands,” which look like giant pads with touch points on their undersides. They’re modeled after the way a massage therapist uses their body parts as tools, kneading with the blade of the hand at one point, then pressing or rolling with the heel of the palm, the elbow or forearm. I’d selected gentle intensity, so Aescape kneaded slowly and deliberately around my scapula at first, then applied light rolling pressure along my spine, mid-back. It didn’t feel exactly like a human hand; but surprisingly, I wasn’t creeped out, either. Instead, the experience mirrored that of a sophisticated massage chair in horizontal — not as effective as an actual person but still providing much-needed relief in key areas.

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The Aescape massage is totally customizable. You dictate the kind you want — I chose “total back and glutes,” but “upper and mid-back focus” and “lower back, glutes and hamstrings focus” were also offerings. You can also use the touch screen to control the intensity of your massage as it’s underway, increasing or decreasing the pressure, or pausing altogether.

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Aescape is the brainchild of Eric Litman, a self-described serial entrepreneur who suffered from neck pain due to a bulging disc and needed daily massages, even while traveling internationally. That’s a headache to schedule, especially when there’s a shortage of massage therapists in the U.S., according to the International Spa Assn.

As a solution, Litman imagined a “fully automated, customizable massage experience,” with the goal of “bringing personalized wellness robotics to the masses,” as the Aescape company describes its mission. Litman founded the robotics company in 2017 and by November 2023, it had $85 million in funding from technology, wellness and hospitality backers.

The Aescape massage table's padded face cradle and user touch screen.

The Aescape massage table’s padded face cradle and user touch screen.

(Christina House / Los Angeles Times)

“The intent was to build a product that addressed the needs of people like myself who struggled with getting the specific massages that their body needed — whether that’s because of a lack of therapist availability, a lack of consistency among therapists or just the desire for a very personalized experience,” Litman said in an interview. “So what we’ve built is something that caters remarkably well to all three of those needs. It’s accessible in many ways: It’s easily booked, it’s usable by people who wouldn’t otherwise be comfortable getting a massage [by a human] and it puts you in control, allowing you to get the specific massage you want at that moment in time.”

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Then there’s this — for better or worse, AI masseuses don’t need breaks to rest their hands. They’re the ideal employees.

“It can operate 24 hours a day,” Litman said. “So it can be available at 11 at night, hours when you’re unlikely to find a masseuse available.”

The Aescape company plans to roll out tables at spas, hotels and fitness centers as well as at corporations, for office workers, nationwide. In addition to its New York and L.A. locations, Aescape tables are now operating in Miami, Baltimore, Nashville, Atlantic City, N.J., and Orlando, Fla. One will debut at the Ritz-Carlton Bacara in Santa Barbara on Dec. 16. Users can find nearby Aescape tables and book sessions on an app.

Software engineers offer frequent updates to the Aescape tables on the types of massages available or the music you can listen to. A holiday playlist was added just this week, for instance.

However, Aescape is not cheap: $60 for half an hour, $120 for an hour.

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It’s also not as intelligent as I’d hoped. Aescape knows where your body parts are located in space, so as to target the areas you’ve selected for your massage. But the feature allowing it to intuit areas of tension that need massaging hasn’t been rolled out yet, Litman says. However, it is getting smarter, he adds.

Aerial sensors above the massage table.

Aerial sensors take a 3D scan of your body, mapping 1.2 million data points, so the massage robot knows where to target your aches and pains.

(Christina House / Los Angeles Times)

“It will continue to learn from all the massages that we give, across all our tables,” Litman says, “and allow for people to get a much more customized, precise massage experience.”

Times reporter Deborah Vankin waves to the camera while on the massage table.

Times reporter Deborah Vankin after her robot massage.

(Christina House / Los Angeles Times)

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As a massage junkie, I prefer the warmth and responsiveness of human touch.

Even so, Aescape gave me a pretty decent massage. I had run stairs the day before for exercise and my glutes were sore. The robot masseuse kneaded my butt in just the right spots and even relieved shoulder tightness from hours of typing at my desk.

And as a bonus, it didn’t interrupt my massage with chitchat.

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An 84-year-old pop superstar just dropped an album — how does she sound so good?

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An 84-year-old pop superstar just dropped an album — how does she sound so good?

Italian pop singer Mina in 1961, Cremona, Italy.

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Mina, one of the bestselling Italian musical artists of all time, just dropped a new album — at the age of 84.

She’s not a household name in the United States, though audiences in this country might recognize the performer’s unmistakable voice from the Netflix series Ripley, the HBO series The White Lotus, and the Pixar animated feature Luca.

But in her native country, Mina has been worshipped for decades — especially because of her powerful and distinctive voice.

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“All generations have always identified with her voice and with her albums,” said Rome-based musicologist and music critic Paulo Prato.

Prato said Mina sings in many languages and is constantly reinventing herself.

“She can sing pop music, opera, jazz, rock and roll,” he said.
 

Italian pop singer Mina with her band Happy Boys in 1959.

Italian pop singer Mina with her band Happy Boys in 1959.

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Retreat from the stage and the media

Like Barbra Streisand, another singer with an enduring career and a voice for the ages, Mina has sold more than 150 million records worldwide. But unlike Streisand, who has given live concerts over the past decade, Mina hasn’t performed in public since 1978.

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“She chose to focus on recording and making the music she wanted to,” said independent scholar Rachel Haworth, who is based in the U.K. and has written a book about Mina.

Mina also doesn’t give media interviews. Haworth said the last time the general public was offered a glimpse into the artist’s creative process was in 2001, in a video live-streamed from her recording studio.

“It broke the server, because so many people wanted to see it,” Haworth said.

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Signs of aging suggest authenticity

As a result of the relative secrecy that surrounds Mina’s work, and the toll aging takes on the human voice, Haworth said it’s hard to know just how she keeps her amazing voice going, or if that voice — especially in our age of artificial intelligence-generated replicas — is truly hers.

Mina’s use of imagery made with AI in at least one recent music video has prompted discussion, Haworth noted.

“There’s this kind of debate around, ‘Well, we never see her. How do we know if it’s even her?’” Haworth said. “And then you get the counter to that, where it’s, ‘Well, of course it’s her, because we know what she sounds like.’”

Mina’s representatives did not respond to NPR’s requests for comment.

But experts generally do believe it’s Mina’s authentic voice on the recordings because it plainly shows signs of aging.

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“In the early years, she had a very clear voice — a lot of flexibility, a lot of range,” said Sarah Schneider, a voice speech pathologist at the University of California, San Francisco, who works with singers. “In listening to her most recent work, there’s a little bit more of a huskier, raspier sound to it — which is not unexpected.”

Navigating the aging voice

Schneider said just as our bodies age, so do our voices.

“Our breathing mechanism changes, our vocal folds themselves change, skin gets thinner, muscle gets smaller, potentially,” Schneider said.

She said Mina’s apparent use of backup singers on her new album, Gassa D’Amante, helps bolster her voice in the higher passages.

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And she added the singer’s retreat to the recording studio has likely worked in her favor over the years. It’s less physically taxing than keeping up with a relentless touring schedule.

And she owns her own label and studio. “Assuming she has control over her studio time, she’s going in when she wants and she’s doing as many takes as she wants,” Schneider said. “Being in control of those things allows for you to choose your best work.”

Not all artists have this kind of control — though many do have access to is the latest technology.

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“I think pop stars are going to be more and more tempted to use AI-assisted voice software that will allow them to keep their vocal timbre and their vocal range maybe longer than their actual physical voices will allow them,” said musicologist and Switched on Pop podcast co-host Nate Sloan.

But Sloan said he hopes they’ll resist the temptation.

“Audiences want to hear a direct and unfiltered performance. They want to hear an artist’s vulnerabilities. They want to hear their flaws,” Sloan said. “Because that is what draws us to art is that human connection.”

Sloan said he gets excited when singers like Mina connect with listeners in an unvarnished way. “There’s space for older artists to make their voices heard,” he said.

Jennifer Vanasco edited this story for broadcast and digital. Chloee Weiner mixed the audio.

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