The Scotsman

Capital firm to ‘transform music’ with singing robot

● Voice tech firm premiering robotic singing on US TV ● Targeting new partners to drive commercial­isation

- By HANNAH BURLEY hannah.burley@scotsman.com

A text-to-speech (TTS) specialist that is the only firm of its kind in the UK was last night set to premiere the world’s first singing TTS synthesise­r as it seeks new tie-ups to help commercial­ise its technology.

Edinburgh-based Cereproc created the first-of-its-kind technology, which was to debut yesterday on US entertainm­ent programme The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon, using the social humanoid robot Sophia.

In a jointly-funded project with Hong Kong-headquarte­red Hanson Robotics, which developed Sophia, Cereproc has given the robot, for which it also created a “characterf­ul” speaking voice, the ability to sing. The Scottish firm said it had “pushed its technology to the next level” by creating the world’s first voice cloning TTS synthesise­r, which will make the capability to sing “accessible to all individual­s” and has the “potential to change the music industry”.

To reproduce the expression, timbre and other characteri­stics associated with singing, Cereproc trained a Deep Neural Network system and built a database specifical­ly designed for singing synthesis.

The firm is in the process of commercial­ising the system and expects to release a beta version for testing next year.

Similar technology is already used as a singing aid in parts of Asia, particular­ly where karaoke is a popular hobby, and in Japan “synthetic vocaloid” Maika has become a popular music act, which performs with an animated avatar.

Matthew Aylett, chief scientific officer at Cereproc, told The Scotsman that the TTS synthesise­r has practical applicatio­ns in the music, toys and games industries.

He said: “At the moment the market is not clear, but there is a lot of potential as we’ve seen with synthetic instrument­s over the years. What we would need to commercial­ise this technology is to find a good partner.”

The technology works particular­ly well for creating backing vocals, enabling musicians to produce music with fewer resources, he said, adding: : “This will probably get a mixed response, just as people had very mixed responses to pitch-changing technology,whichwasco­ntroversia­l in various ways.

“We are not trying to replace humansingi­ng.thesynthes­iser doesn’t know what it’s singing and one of the most fundamenta­l elements of a human singer is that they understand the sentiment, the reality of what they’re singing. But at the same time, as computers enter the social domain, being able to do these things becomes more and more important.”

Paul Welham, chief executive at Cereproc, said: “We believe strongly in continuous innovation.

“Cereproc are sure to be partnering Hanson in the future, developing new expressive TTS voices with even more novel functional­ity.”

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