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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. Vocaloid 6 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocaloid_6

    Voices developed for it offer improved synthesis quality, multilingual singing and drastically smaller file sizes. Support for older voicebanks from Vocaloid 3 and up remains. It also features the addition of Vocalo Changer, a tool that converts the voice from a singing recording into that of a Vocaloid voice.

  4. List of Vocaloid products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Vocaloid_products

    Hatsune Miku V4 English: Crypton Future Media English Female Saki Fujita August 31, 2016 [66] Tohoku Zunko V4: AH-Software Japanese Female Satomi Sato October 27, 2016 Cyber Songman: Yamaha Corporation English Male October 31, 2016 Macne Nana V4: MI7 Japanese (Nana, Petit) English (Nana) Female (Nana, Petit) Haruna Ikezawa December 15, 2016 Uni ...

  5. Phony (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phony_(song)

    Tsumiki said that compared to previous Vocaloid voicebanks, KAFU can transmit an overwhelming large amount of information and show more "flesh-and-blood". These characteristics are reflected in this song, with Tsumiki stating that the production is fresh and exciting, and the vocal style is completely different from traditional songs. [3]

  6. Vocaloid 3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocaloid_3

    Oliver is an English male vocal based on the voice of a 13-year-old child. He was the first English vocal released for the new Vocaloid 3 engine and the first English based on a child's voice. He was designed as a choir singer. He was released on December 21, 2011, by PowerFX and was developed by VocaTone. [29]

  7. Fukase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukase

    On January 8, 2016, four demos for FUKASE were released. It was announced that he would receive two Japanese voicebanks: Normal and Soft. In addition, he received an English voicebank, which made him a Japanese and English bilingual VOCALOID. His digital download, physical copy and starter packs were marked for release on January 28. [5]

  8. Vocaloid 4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocaloid_4

    Cyber Diva is an American-accented female vocal released on February 4, 2015. [8]A version of this vocal was also added to the Mobile Vocaloid Editor app, making it the first English vocal for the app at the time of release, [citation needed] and for quite a while the only vocal on the English app.

  9. Goodbye Sengen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodbye_Sengen

    "Goodbye Sengen" (グッバイ宣言, Gubbai Sengen, 'Goodbye Declaration') is a 2020 song written by Japanese music producer Chinozo, utilizing the Vocaloid voice library V Flower. The song is the most viewed Vocaloid song on YouTube with more than 100 million views, and received over 3 billion listens on TikTok by 2022. [1]