
The Magenta project runs on top of Google's open-source AI engine, TensorFlow. As we begin accepting code from community contributors, the blog will also be open to posts from these contributors, not just Google Brain team members." You can follow our progress and check out some of the music and art Magenta helps create right here on this blog. We'd love to know what you think of our work-as an artist, musician, researcher, coder, or just an aficionado. We encourage you to join our discussion list and shape how Magenta evolves. If the Magenta tools don't work for you, let us know. "Our goal is to build a community where the right people are there to help out. If you're a musician or an artist (or aspire to be one-it's easier than you might think!), we hope you'll try using these tools to make some noise or images or videos… or whatever you like," reads a blog post from Google.

Once we have a stable set of tools and models, we'll invite external contributors to check in code to our GitHub.

If you're a researcher or a coder, you can check out our alpha-version code. "To start, Magenta is being developed by a small team of researchers from the Google Brain team. It's only 90 seconds long, but it's at least an early demonstration of Magenta's capabilities. Here's the first piece of music from Google's machine-learning system.
