Linux |
Windows |
|---|---|
Morise's World Vocoder is a fast and high-quality vocoder. World Vocoder parameterizes speech into three components:
- Pitch (fundamental frequency, F0) contour
- Harmonic spectral envelope
- Aperiodic spectral envelope (relative to the harmonic spectral envelope)
It can also resynthesize speech using these features (see examples below).
For more information, please visit Morise's World repository and the official website of World Vocoder
import pyworld as pw
_f0, t = pw.dio(x, fs) # raw pitch extractor
f0 = pw.stonemask(x, _f0, t, fs) # pitch refinement
sp = pw.cheaptrick(x, f0, t, fs) # extract smoothed spectrogram
ap = pw.d4c(x, f0, t, fs) # extract aperiodicity
y = pw.synthesize(f0, sp, ap, fs)# Convert speech into features (using default options)
f0, sp, ap = pw.wav2world(x, fs)pip install pyworld
git clone https://github.com/JeremyCCHsu/Python-Wrapper-for-World-Vocoder.git
cd Python-Wrapper-for-World-Vocoder
git submodule update --init
pip install -U pip
pip install -r requirements.txt
pip install .It will automatically git clone Morise's World Vocoder (C++ version).
(It seems to me that using virtualenv or conda is the best practice.)
You can validate installation by running
cd demo
python demo.pyto see if you get results in test/ direcotry.
(Please avoid writing and executing codes in the Python-Wrapper-for-World-Vocoder folder for now.)
- Use
pip install .is safer and you can easily uninstall pyworld bypip uninstall pyworld - Another way to install pyworld is via
python setup.py install
- Add
--userif you don't have root access - Add
--record install.txtto track the installation dir
- Add
- If you just want to try out some experiments, execute
python setup.py build_ext --inplace
Then you can use PyWorld from this directory.
You can also copy the resulting pyworld.so (pyworld.{arch}.pyd on Windows) file to~/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages(or corresponding Windows directory) so that you can use it everywhere like an installed package.
Alternatively you can copy/symlink the compiled files using pip, e.g.pip install -e .
- Operating systems
- Linux Ubuntu 16.04/14.04
- Windows (thanks to wuaalb)
- Python
- 2.7 (Windows is currently not supported)
- 3.6/3.5
- Required packages
- Cython 0.24 (or later versions; required)
- Numpy
- Optional (for demo.py only)
- argparse
- pysoundfile
- Matplotlib
You can simply install these by pip install -r requirements.txt
- Upgrade your Cython version to 0.24.
(I failed to build it on Cython 0.20.1post0)
It'll require you to download Cython form http://cython.org/
Unzip it, andpython setup.py installit.
(I triedpip install Cythonbut the upgrade didn't seem correct)
(Again, add--userif you don't have root access.) - Upon executing
demo/demo.py, the following code might be needed in some environments (e.g. when you're working on a remote Linux server):
import matplotlib
matplotlib.use('Agg')- If you encounter
library not found: sndfileerror upon executingdemo.py,
you might have to install it byapt-get install libsoundfile1.
You can also replacepysoundfilewithscipyorlibrosa, but some modification is needed:- librosa:
- load(fiilename, dtype=np.float64)
- output.write_wav(filename, wav, fs)
- remember to pass
dtypeargument to ensure that the method gives you adouble.
- scipy:
- You'll have to write a customized utility function based on the following methods
- scipy.io.wavfile.read (but this gives you
short) - scipy.io.wavfile.write
- librosa:
- Realtime synthesizer
Thank all contributors (wuaalb, r9y9, rikrd, kudan2510) for making this repo better and sotelo whose world.py inspired this repo.