![]() ![]() Galaco: original doll designed by a group called galaxxxy, dress has a space (Galaxy) design on it, Galaxy=Galaco Sonika: Hindu name for "Golden" (she wears a yellow coat, idk bout this one not to confident in it) Mergurine Luka: Sound that goes around (because she sings in both English and Japanese) Kagami : Mirror (Mirror image, Rin and Len can be considered mirror images of each other, as said by the company) Hatsune Miku: The first sound from the future I might add more to this as time goes on, but don't hold me to it >.> To be fair, Vocaloid is much more expensive (considering it's not free) and the learning curve to get good results out of any language but Japanese is very steep as well.īasically it's up to the effort you put in, the tutorials you watch, which voicebank(s) you use, and how good you are at mixing afterwards, because you can make a pretty low quality vocal sound good when mixing it with the music.Some of these you may or may not already know, and I'm not going to include all the vocaloids, but hope you enjoy reading this anyway. ![]() I haven't used it myself, but I've heard from others that it's difficult to get a grasp on at first. A/E doesn't come with its own engine, though - you need a DAW to run it in and a midi keyboard (or the ability to change things in files around so you can use your keyboard inside the DAW) to make the notes. Alter/Ego is supposed to be higher quality, and not vintage-exclusive. Chipspeech was meant to be the voices of older synths (like that one old computer Dandy, and the Vozer) and so was rather robotic. It's a sort of step up from Plogue's older synth chipspeech. It's very high quality for being a free synth, and A/E's current voice, Daisy, is pretty good. Also, popular company Crypton has made a second engine that newer Vocaloids can run in, called Piapro Studio, but that needs a DAW to run in, and I think only their company's Vocaloids are compatible?Īlter/Ego is still a very new engine. More complicated languages are still being toyed with to get more natural pronunciation (for example, English's unvoiced consonant is not included, so if one were to have the voicebank say a word like 'that', the on the end would be aspirated unless replaced with a or unaspirated ). The ones in more structured languages are very smooth right now (Japanese and Spanish). In a bad studio/with a bad mic there will still be background noise, defeating the purpose of a noiseless engine). There is little to no engine noise (depending on where it was recorded of course. It's on the fourth generation now, and recording style had drastically changed from the first gen. The Vocaloid software is going to be thirteen years old, come January. Haha, it's a pretty big difference honestly. ![]()
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January 2023
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