A few Questions Regarding Vocal Range, Timbre, Ability to extract each voice separately, Ability to clone voices on a recording that has more than one voice,
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I have a few source recordings that only have a few notes or only one note, and when I changed the voice of a person in a recording to the model's voice or was using go-realtime-gui.bat, there was never enough vocal range for the recording or me singing outside of the vocal range of the samples. And when I did it sounded awful, I tried adding some pitches to one of the samples in mixcraft with the foramt preservation, but it kept going back and forth between the synthetically added one and the one already in the sample and took up over 4GB. I already deleted that model. How would I artificially add more vocal range and timbre so that I can sing as high or as low as I want in realtime, or have a recording that has a wider vocal range than the source recording and it sound natural throughout the whole vocal range? And also, how would I artificially add timbre control so that if I am singing in realtime with the go-realtime-gui.bat, or change the voice on a recording, it will respond to me raising or lowering my larynx or the timbral differences in the recording or quieter or louder or stronger or weaker singing?
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When will it be possible to extract each voice/harmony part separately or to a separate file?
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When will it be possible to clone and replace voices on a recording that have more than one voice?
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Is there a way to have the converted recording have the same timbral changes, pitch changes, intonations as the model samples? For example, if you have a recording of a song, but you want to hear how it would sound if was sung like 10-15 years later or earlier besides singing it yourself with go-realtime-gui.bat? From This: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2m--R3J6f4 To This Mary Travers Leaving On A JetPlane 1971.zip
I have included some samples of what I was talking about regarding pitch and timbre. In both of these recordings my larynx was at varying degrees of height,