Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
On November 5, 2015, an update to the V3 Megpoid package, called "Megpoid V4", was released for the Vocaloid 4 engine updating the vocals from V3 Megpoid and V3 Megpoid - Native along with adding alternative versions to the vocals including: MellowAdult, PowerFat, NaturalSweet, SoftWhisper, and NativeFat. These vocals made use of the new ...
The Vocaloid 2 product "Megpoid" was updated to the Vocaloid 3 version under the name of "V3 Megpoid". Several products were released under this name. The first of these packages was the "Megpoid Complete" product which featured 4 new vocals ("adult", "power", "sweet" and "whisper") with natural song tones.
V3 Megpoid - Native: Internet Co., Ltd Japanese Female Megumi Nakajima February 26, 2014 Megpoid English: Internet Co., Ltd English Female Megumi Nakajima February 26, 2014 Anon and Kanon: Yamaha Corporation/Bplats Japanese Female March 3, 2014 v flower: Yamaha Corporation/Bplats Japanese Female May 9, 2014 Tohoku Zunko: AH-Software Japanese Female
Yuzuki Yukari: [57] Japanese female vocal, has 3 versions "Jun", "Onn" and "Lin" which are each sold separately. Sachiko: Japanese female vocal. Megpoid: [58] Female vocal, has two vocals "Native" which is a Japanese vocal and "English" both are sold separately. Unity-Chan: Japanese female vocal. [59]
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.
After scheduled maintenance of the official Vocaloid website on October 13, 2022, Yamaha released Vocaloid 6 without prior announcement. [1] [2] It introduces the Vocaloid:AI engine, which had been in development since around Vocaloid 3 and was first publicly shown in a concert, reviving the voice of deceased singer Hibari Misora. [3]
She then became the vocal provider of the Vocaloid program Megpoid, which went on sale on June 6, 2009. [21] Her next single "Jellyfish no Kokuhaku" (ジェリーフィッシュの告白, Jerīfisshu no Kokuhaku) was released on December 9, 2009; the title song was used as the first ending theme to the anime series Kobato. [22]
Kokone's project began with the development a falsetto vocal for the Megpoid software. The trouble was matching all 50 Japanese phonetics from Gumi's normal vocal and her falsetto. The focus of the vocal would have been to extend GUMI's range beyond "F4" giving her the capabilities to reach the range "A3" in the Vocaloid software.