Its signal processing part was developed through a joint research project led by Kenmochi Hideki at the Pompeu Fabra University in Spain in 2000 (the same team that later founded Voctro Labs[1]) and originally was not intended to be a full commercial project. Backed by the Yamaha Corporation, it developed the software into the commercial product "Vocaloid.
The software enables users to synthesize singing by typing in lyrics and melody. It uses synthesizing technology with specially recorded vocals of voice actors or singers. To create a song, the user must input the melody and lyrics. A piano roll type interface is used to input the melody and the lyrics can be entered on each note. The software can change the stress of the pronunciations, add effects such as vibrato, or change the dynamics and tone of the voice. Each Vocaloid is sold as "a singer in a bo
Vocaloid
Yamaha started development of Vocaloid in March 2000[13] and announced it for the first time at the German fair Musikmesse on March 5–9, 2003.[17]The first Vocaloids, Leon and Lola, were released by the studio Zero-G on March 3, 2004, both of which were sold as a "Virtual Soul Vocalist". Leon and Lola made their first appearance at the NAMM Show on January 15, 2004.[18] Leon and Lola were also demonstrated at the Zero-G Limited booth during Wired Nextfest and won the 2005 Electronic Musician Editor's Choice Award.[19] Zero-G later released Miriam, with her voice provided by Miriam Stockley, in July 2004. Later that year, Crypton Future Media also released their first Vocaloid, Meiko. In June 2005, Yamaha upgraded the engine version to 1.1.[20] A patch was later released to update all Vocaloid engines to Vocaloid 1.1.2, adding new features to the software, although there were differences between the output results of the engine.[21] A total of five Vocaloid products were released from 2004 to 2006. Vocaloid had no previous rival technology to contend with at the time of its release, with the English version only having to face the later release of VirSyn's Cantor software during its original run.[22] Despite having Japanese phonetics, the interface lacked a Japanese version and both Japanese and English vocals had an English interface. The only differences between versions were the color and logo that changed per template. As of 2011, this version of the software is no longer supported by Yamaha and will no longer be updated.x" designed to act as a replacement for an actual singer. The software was originally only available in Englishstarting with the first Vocaloids Leon and Lola, and Japanese with Meiko, but Vocaloid 3 has added support for Spanish for the new Spanish Vocaloids Bruno and Clara, Chinese for Luo Tianyi and Korean for SeeU.Hatsune Miku (初音ミク ) is a singing synthesizer application with a humanoid persona,
developed by Crypton Future Media. It uses Yamaha Corporation's Vocaloid 2 and Vocaloid 3 synthesizing technology. The name of the character comes from merging the Japanese words for first(初 hatsu ), sound (音 ne ) and future (Miku (ミク ) sounds like a nanori reading of future, 未来, normally read as "mirai"[1]), referring to her position as the first of Crypton's "Character Vocal Series". She was the second Vocaloid sold using the Vocaloid 2 engine, and the first Japanese Vocaloid to use the Japanese version of the Vocaloid 2 engine. Her voice is sampled from Japanese voice actress,Saki Fujita. Hatsune Miku has performed at her concerts onstage as an animated projection.[2] Hatsune Miku is portrayed to be a 16-year-old girl with long light teal pigtails
Vocaloid 2 (CV Series 01) package | |
Developer(s) | Crypton Future Media |
---|---|
Initial release | August 31, 2007 |
Stable release | 2.012 / February 9, 2009 |
Development status | Active |
Operating system | Microsoft Windows |
Platform | PC |
Available in | Japanese English[citation needed] |
Type | Musical Synthesizer Application |
License | Proprietaryhttps://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd= |
Website | www.crypton.co.jp/mp/pages/prod/vocaloid/cv01.jsp |
This Model has been in real life concerts!
Dont belive it? watch this!
cool! your's trully astrid r.o.
ReplyDeletei love the vocaloids
ReplyDeleteI love vocaloid so musch but it is not new. There are like, 20 albums already man. Its not new at all
ReplyDelete