

For each effect, I'd suggest listening first to the effected file before listening to the dry.

#Robotize your voice download#
Afterwards, visit the TC-Helicon website, and download some of the MP3 audio demos. Pretend you have crooked teeth and a "ciggy" in your mouth, and read his words in an excited but half-whispered British accent to yourself, as if you're sharing revelations with an unenlightened friend. His stream-of-consciousness comments follow.

He spent a couple months with the VoicePro, and I asked him to tell me what he thought. I immediately took it down to my NYC studios, and handed it over to über-producer Neil Mclellan, whom I introduced to Tape Op readers in issue #49 with his review of the Dynaudio Acoustics BM5A/BM9S monitoring system. Six months later one ended up on my doorstep. It was the most gee-whiz product I saw at the show. Both in terms of usability and promised performance, it seemed years ahead of any plug-ins I'd seen. I realized very quickly that the combination of voice-trained pitch detection, voice modeling, and voice-optimized time-stretching-and just as important, a well-designed and efficient UI-makes it an extremely compelling product. The box was designed to do one thing really well: process the human voice. One of the engineers from TC walked me through some of the features and gave me a demo on a beta unit. Got some feedback? You can share it with me here.It was at last year's NAMM show that I saw the VoicePro for the first time. And note that if you don't have an internet connection, or if for some reason the voice audio download isn't working for you, you can also use a recording app that records your devices "internal" or "system" sound. Note: If you have offline-compatible voices installed on your device (check your system Text-To-Speech settings), then this web app works offline! Find the "add to homescreen" or "install" button in your browser to add a shortcut to this app in your home screen. You can also adjust the pitch of the voice to make it sound younger/older, and you can even adjust the rate/speed of the generated speech, so you can create a fast-talking high-pitched chipmunk voice if you want to.
#Robotize your voice generator#
You could use this website as a free voice over generator for narrating your videos in cases where don't want to use your real voice. You're free to use the generated voices for any purpose - no attribution needed. As mentioned above, the downloaded audio uses external voices which may be different to your device's local ones.
#Robotize your voice how to#
If you don't know how to install more voices, and you can't find a tutorial online, you can try downloading the audio with the download button instead. Many operating systems (including some versions of Android, for example) only come with one voice by default, and the others need to be downloaded in your device's settings. Note: If the list of available text-to-speech voices is small, or all the voices sound the same, then you may need to install text-to-speech voices on your device. You can even use it to reverse the generated audio, randomly distort the speed of the voice throughout the audio, add a scary ghost effect, or add an "anonymous hacker" effect to it. For example, you can make the voice sound more robotic, or like a giant ogre, or an evil demon. Want more voices? You can download the generated audio and then use voicechanger.io to add effects to the voice. If you don't like the externally-downloaded voice, you can use a recording app on your device to record the "system" or "internal" sound while you're playing the generated voice audio. You can download the audio as a file, but note that the downloaded voices may be different to your browser's voices because they are downloaded from an external text-to-speech server. This web app allows you to generate voice audio from text - no login needed, and it's completely free! It uses your browser's built-in voice synthesis technology, and so the voices will differ depending on the browser that you're using.
