![]() ![]() So to make her say “asa”, you simply type out 「あ」and then 「さ」( disregard the little brackets ). CV Japanese voicebanks usually only require you to type the corresponding Hiragana character to make her sing. “CV” is the easiest one, though it also sounds the worst, making voicebanks choppy and unnatural that UTAU was famous for in its early days. ![]() Some voicebanks wanting to be quirky may also call it CVC, though some of those voicebanks are just CV with some extra stuff ). In UTAU, there are 3 major methods of synthesis, CV, VCV, and CVVC ( with CVVC sometimes being referred to as VCCV in more particularly complicated form. It’s a “CV” voicebank, which is a term that you’re going to become well-acquainted with. It’s the voicebank most users are introduced to. Also known as “Diphonic” or “Single-Sound” ): Kasane Teto CV ( listed as V-CV on the website, note the hyphen. She has other voicebanks, but they’re all mostly Japanese. There’s literally only one English voicebank for Teto. ![]()
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