ZeroVOX: A zero-shot realtime TTS system, fully offline, free and open source
ZeroVOX is a text-to-speech (TTS) system built for real-time and embedded use.
ZeroVox runs entirely offline, ensuring privacy and independence from cloud services. It's completely free and open source, inviting community contributions and suggestions.
Modeled after FastSpeech2, ZeroVOX goes a step further with zero-shot speaker cloning, utilizing Global Style Tokens (GST) and Speaker Conditional Layer Normalization (SCLN) for effective speaker embedding. The system supports both English and German speech generation from a single model, trained on an extensive dataset. ZeroVOX is phoneme-based, leveraging pronunciation dictionaries to ensure accurate word articulation, utilizing the CMU dictionary for English and a custom dictionary for German from the ZamiaSpeech project where also the phoneme set used originates from.
ZeroVOX can serve as a TTS backend for LLMs, enabling real-time interactions, and as an easy-to-install TTS system for home automation systems like Home Assistant. Since it is non-autoregressive like FastSpeech2 its output is generally easy to control and predictable.
License: ZeroVOX is Apache 2 licensed with many parts leveraged from other projects (see credits section below) under MIT license.
Audio Corpus Stats
Current ZeroVOX training corpus stats:
german audio corpus: 16679 speakers, 475.3 hours audio
english audio corpus: 19899 speakers, 358.7 hours audio
ZeroVOX Model Training
Data Preparation
(1/5) prepare corpus yamls:
pushd configs/corpora/cv_de_100
./gen_cv.sh
popd
(2/5) prepare alignment:
utils/prepare_align.py configs/corpora/cv_de_100
(3/5) OOVs:
utils/oovtool.py -a -m zerovox-g2p-autoreg-zamia-de configs/corpora/cv_de_100
(4/5) align:
utils/align.py --kaldi-model=tts_de_kaldi_zamia_4 configs/corpora/cv_de_100
(5/5) preprocess:
utils/preprocess.py configs/corpora/cv_de_100
TTS Model Training
utils/train_tts.py \
--head=2 --reduction=1 --expansion=2 --kernel-size=5 --n-blocks=3 --block-depth=3 \
--accelerator=gpu --threads=24 --batch-size=32 --val_epochs=8 \
--infer-device=cpu \
--lr=0.0001 --warmup_epochs=25 \
--hifigan-checkpoint=VCTK_V2 \
--out-folder=models/tts_de_zerovox_base_1 \
configs/corpora/cv_de_100 \
configs/corpora/de_hui/de_hui_*.yaml \
configs/corpora/de_thorsten.yaml
Kaldi Accoustic Model Training
utils/train_kaldi.py --model-name=tts_de_kaldi_zamia_4 --num-jobs=12 configs/corpora/cv_de_100
G2P Model Training
run training:
scripts/train_g2p_de_autoreg.sh
Credits
Originally based on Efficientspeech by Rowel Atienza
https://github.com/roatienza/efficientspeech
@inproceedings{atienza2023efficientspeech,
title={EfficientSpeech: An On-Device Text to Speech Model},
author={Atienza, Rowel},
booktitle={ICASSP 2023-2023 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP)},
pages={1--5},
year={2023},
organization={IEEE}
}
The FastSpeech2 encoder and decoder is borrowed (under MIT license) from Chung-Ming Chien's implementation of FastSpeech2
https://github.com/ming024/FastSpeech2
@misc{ren2022fastspeech2fasthighquality,
title={FastSpeech 2: Fast and High-Quality End-to-End Text to Speech},
author={Yi Ren and Chenxu Hu and Xu Tan and Tao Qin and Sheng Zhao and Zhou Zhao and Tie-Yan Liu},
year={2022},
eprint={2006.04558},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={eess.AS},
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2006.04558},
}
The MEL decoder implementation is borrowed (under MIT license) from Tomoki Hayashi's ParallelWaveGAN project:
https://github.com/kan-bayashi/ParallelWaveGAN
The G2P transformer models are based on DeepPhonemizer by Axel Springer News Media & Tech GmbH & Co. KG - Ideas Engineering (MIT license)
https://github.com/as-ideas/DeepPhonemizer
@inproceedings{Yolchuyeva_2019, series={interspeech_2019},
title={Transformer Based Grapheme-to-Phoneme Conversion},
url={http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/Interspeech.2019-1954},
DOI={10.21437/interspeech.2019-1954},
booktitle={Interspeech 2019},
publisher={ISCA},
author={Yolchuyeva, Sevinj and Németh, Géza and Gyires-Tóth, Bálint},
year={2019},
month=sep, pages={2095–2099},
collection={interspeech_2019} }
The ZeroShot ResNet based speaker encoding is borrowed (under MIT license) from voxceleb_trainer by Clova AI Research
https://github.com/clovaai/voxceleb_trainer
@inproceedings{chung2020in,
title={In defence of metric learning for speaker recognition},
author={Chung, Joon Son and Huh, Jaesung and Mun, Seongkyu and Lee, Minjae and Heo, Hee Soo and Choe, Soyeon and Ham, Chiheon and Jung, Sunghwan and Lee, Bong-Jin and Han, Icksang},
booktitle={Proc. Interspeech},
year={2020}
}
@inproceedings{he2016deep,
title={Deep residual learning for image recognition},
author={He, Kaiming and Zhang, Xiangyu and Ren, Shaoqing and Sun, Jian},
booktitle={IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition},
pages={770--778},
year={2016}
}
The ZeroShot Global Style Tokens based speaker embedding is based on GST-Tacotron by Chengqi Deng (MIT license)
https://github.com/KinglittleQ/GST-Tacotron
which is an implementation of
@misc{wang2018style,
title={Style Tokens: Unsupervised Style Modeling, Control and Transfer in End-to-End Speech Synthesis},
author={Yuxuan Wang and Daisy Stanton and Yu Zhang and RJ Skerry-Ryan and Eric Battenberg and Joel Shor and Ying Xiao and Fei Ren and Ye Jia and Rif A. Saurous},
year={2018},
eprint={1803.09017},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CL}
}
Speaker Conditional Layer Normalization (SCLN) which is borrowed (under MIT license) from
https://github.com/keonlee9420/Cross-Speaker-Emotion-Transfer
by Keon Lee
@misc{wu2021crossspeakeremotiontransferbased,
title={Cross-speaker Emotion Transfer Based on Speaker Condition Layer Normalization and Semi-Supervised Training in Text-To-Speech},
author={Pengfei Wu and Junjie Pan and Chenchang Xu and Junhui Zhang and Lin Wu and Xiang Yin and Zejun Ma},
year={2021},
eprint={2110.04153},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={eess.AS},
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2110.04153},
}