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  2. Utau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utau

    In March 2008, Ameya/Ayame released UTAU, a free, advanced support tool shareware software that was downloadable from its main website. UTAU (歌う), literally meaning 'to sing' in Japanese, has its origin in the activity of "Jinriki Bōkaroido" (人力ボーカロイド, Manual Vocaloid), where people edit an existing vocal track, extract phonemes, adjust pitch, and reassemble them to create ...

  3. List of Vocaloid products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Vocaloid_products

    August 5, 2012 (prize in the Vocaloid 3 music contest) VY2v3: Yamaha Corporation/Bplats Japanese Unisex ("masculine" sounding voice) October 19, 2012 MAYU: Exit Tunes: Japanese Female Mayumi Morinaga [57] December 5, 2012 Avanna: Zero-G English Female Rachael. December 22, 2012 KAITO V3: Crypton Future Media Japanese English Male Naoto Fūga ...

  4. Vocaloid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VOCALOID

    The series also saw guest cameos of Vocaloid variants such as Hachune Miku, Yowane Haku, Akita Neru and the Utauloid Kasane Teto. The series comprises the original 28 chapters serialized in Comic Rush and a collection of the first 10 chapters in a single tankōbon volume. [77] A manga was produced for Lily by Kei Garou, who also drew the mascot.

  5. Talk:Utau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Utau

    Vocaloid and UTAU are "vocal resynthesis engines." They are basically autotune-on-steroids, using existing voice recordings strung together and edited to sound musical, nothing more, nothing less. They aren't speech synthesizers since they are a) not true synthesizers and b) for singing rather than speech.

  6. Kasane Teto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kasane_Teto

    Kasane Teto (Japanese: 重音テト) is a virtual singer software (known as a voicebank) created on the Japanese textboard 2channel for April Fools' Day, 2008. [1] Although the software was initially created as a hoax and did not exist, it later was actually produced and made compatible with singing voice synthesis software UTAU, allowing it to sing.

  7. Vocaloid 6 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocaloid_6

    Vocaloid 6 is a singing voice synthesizer application developed by Yamaha Corporation and marks the introduction of Vocaloid:AI technology. It is the successor to Vocaloid 5 in the Vocaloid series. History

  8. Vocaloid 3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocaloid_3

    Vocaloid 3 is a singing voice synthesizer and successor to Vocaloid 2 in the Vocaloid series. This version of the software is a much more expansive version, containing many new features, three new languages and many more vocals than past software versions combined. It was succeeded by Vocaloid 4.

  9. Category:Vocaloid songs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Vocaloid_songs

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