Certainly it's still far from being able to deceive a human into thinking synthesized speech of any speaker saying anything is real, but it has definitely and clearly capture a certain quality to each of those voices. Really cool project and I'm sure it portends even more awesome work in the area.
I love that you're shooting for a holy grail!<p>Aiming for lyrics is a much higher target than everyday text though, due to grammatical hints and the extra pitch and phrasing demands of lyrics. Your results might hit people harder on non-lyrical textual bodies.<p>Keep up the good work, I'd like to make something like this for musical instrument someday :)<p>P.s. have you ever heard of Douglas Hofstadters Letter Spirit project which synthesizes fonts from a subset? <a href="http://www.cogsci.indiana.edu/farg/mcgrawg/fonts.gif" rel="nofollow">http://www.cogsci.indiana.edu/farg/mcgrawg/fonts.gif</a>
This is very cool.<p>Reminds me of this -- before Roger Ebert died, he tried to have his voice reconstructed by some company using audio from his TV show, etc., but alas, it was too difficult at the time, so he ended up using one of the Apple TTS voices instead.
I'm super excited about this.<p>One of my biggest peeves right now is that voices cost a ton of money, few are readily available otherwise, and a lot of the new stuff is cloud-dependent. (Which is a big turn-off to me.)<p>What are you looking to do with this?
There have been rumours of government capability to do this for some time. For example, to use false voice messages for Radar instructions to enemy fighters etc. Interesting to see it in the commercial space.
Request: Star Trek computer voice (Majel Barrett Roddenberry)<p>There's hundreds of episodes containing it, including remastered audio in the HD versions of TNG.
They all just sound robotic to me.<p>Why even attempt to get things like imitating specific people's voices to work when your speech isn't even fluid and pronounced clearly to begin with?