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Robot voices
Posted: Tue Feb 22, 2005 10:45 am
by ken
Hi All,
I need robot voices for a track I am working on. Does anyone know a good place to get them? I would like to be able to tell it what to say.
Ken
Posted: Tue Feb 22, 2005 11:12 am
by jb
Fruityloops has a gizmo that does exactly this.
Posted: Tue Feb 22, 2005 12:07 pm
by UnDesirable
http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~thman/VST/vst-eff3.htm
There are some free plugins at this site. If you scroll to the middle of the page there is a plugin from Steinberg called "Tranceformer". It is a ringmodulator that can give you a robotic sound when applied to a vocal track. It is for a windows platform.
Posted: Tue Feb 22, 2005 2:37 pm
by c hack
If you have a mac, you can just write out whatever you want it to say in textedit, then tell it to speak it, and record it as it speaks it. You can use whatever voices come with the mac (like 10 or 20). At least one sounds like Stephen Hawking.
Posted: Tue Feb 22, 2005 3:48 pm
by UnDesirable
If you are talking about text-to-speech programs. Here are a few and some are free.
http://www.download.com/Voice-Recogniti ... ag=stbc.gp
I've used Speakonia which is on the second page. Ultra HAL looks interesting.
Posted: Tue Feb 22, 2005 4:06 pm
by Caravan Ray
jb wrote:Fruityloops has a gizmo that does exactly this.
My "ABCD Puppies" used the fruityloops voice
Posted: Tue Feb 22, 2005 4:17 pm
by thehipcola
UnDesirable wrote:Ultra HAL looks interesting.
Ultra HAL is AWESOME! So much better than the SAM program I had for my Commodore 64 way back...
I promise to all of you, I'm going to try REALLY hard not to have robot voices in my music.
Well, ok. Maybe like one tune...that's got to be allowed, right?
great link UnDesirable...
Posted: Tue Feb 22, 2005 5:31 pm
by HeuristicsInc
Kraftwerk use vocoders to modify their own voices, like I did in "We Are All Famous."
My vocoder was a software one.
But if you just want spoken robots, text-to-speech is what you're after.
-bill
Posted: Tue Feb 22, 2005 7:36 pm
by UnDesirable
TheHipCola wrote:
Ultra HAL is AWESOME! So much better than the SAM program I had for my Commodore 64 way back...
I just tried Ultra HAL and it seemed pretty good, but..........
I ran spybot afterwards and it seems to have put some tracking software on my machine. I also noticed it was automatically loading on my systems tray during startup so I took it off there. Now HAL doesn't want to run, so I uninstalled it. Speakonia has a few less voices but it never gave me these problems.
Posted: Wed Feb 23, 2005 6:22 am
by thehipcola
well, well, well....lucky for me I only installed on my work computer....DOH!
bastards. Funny though, I barely played with it last night, and this morning when I booted up my PC it started reading all of my dialogue boxes to me...freaked me out.
guess i'll have to remove it then. spyware sucks. Thanks for the tip!
Posted: Wed Feb 23, 2005 1:25 pm
by Sober
A vocoder would do fine as well.
Posted: Fri Mar 07, 2008 1:49 pm
by ujnhunter
windows 95 used to have a built in text reader robot voice... ala OK Computer... not sure what it was called or if it comes on any Windows versions other than 95...
Posted: Sat Mar 08, 2008 5:17 am
by Jerry
For about $15 you can buy an excellent robot voice toy at Toys R Us. Look around. Kids were into these voice affecters a couple years ago. Mine is a collapsable megaphone with pitch control, distortion control and robotic effects.
Posted: Sat Mar 08, 2008 1:31 pm
by fretnoize
ujnhunter wrote:windows 95 used to have a built in text reader robot voice... ala OK Computer... not sure what it was called or if it comes on any Windows versions other than 95...
Actually I believe it's still available on all versions of windows under accessibility options. Used as a tool to help the vision impaired. I'm in OSX right now so I can't confirm.
Posted: Sat Mar 08, 2008 9:30 pm
by fluffy
I'd just say to use a vocoder, or a pitch corrector set to only do one note (and sing a different note). Maybe add some flanging.
I hope you can finish your track soon, Ken!
Posted: Sat Mar 08, 2008 10:04 pm
by HeuristicsInc
I've read that sounding like a robot is a good bit more about how you sing/talk than the effect, when you add the two together. Dunno if that's true, but work on trying to sound unemotional.
-bill
Posted: Sat Mar 08, 2008 11:53 pm
by fretnoize
fluffy wrote:I hope you can finish your track soon, Ken!
haha yeah... considering: PostPosted: Tue Feb 22, 2005 12:45 pm Post subject: Robot voices
any luck in the past 3 years with finishing that track?
Posted: Sun Mar 09, 2008 12:22 am
by fluffy
(that was the joke)