#VOCALOID VSQ STRONGER THAN YOU PROFESSIONAL#
His voicebank was praised for his more realisitc results in comparison to Cypton's "Character Vocal" series Vocaloids and offered the user much more professional standards because of it. Also, prior to VY2's release, he was the easiest Japanese male voicebank to use overall. His voice is joint second with VY2 as the deepest vocal within the Vocaloid 2 era, the only vocal deeper than his is English Vocaloid Big AL.
He was the only Japanese male vocal that could produce a low masculine vocal tone until VY2's release. His pronunciations are overall smoother than most other Vocaloids. It had one of the largest tone range of the Japanese Vocaloid 2 voicebanks and was one of the better male vocaloids released during the Vocaloid 2 engines run. (At the time of its release was the best quality Japanese Vocaloid voicebank and was designed to give professional singer results. Len is, however, incapable of producing truly deep, masculine vocals due to his female voice provider. At a known optimum vocal range of #C5 Kagamine Len has the highest male vocal within the Vocaloid 2 range, however, take in mind that he was voiced by a female vocalist. His vocal range capabilities are also slightly larger than Rin. He can harmonize with Rin relatively easier than most Vocaloids due to having similar vocal capabilities. He is a young boy sounding singer and the vocal range is in the Soprano scale.
#VOCALOID VSQ STRONGER THAN YOU SOFTWARE#
Len's vocal expands the software capabilities by offering a vocal that fulfills a male role.
Rin's pronounications are sharp compared to Kagamine Len's. Rin is a deeper teenage vocal than Hatsune Miku. The Character vocal series have characteristics about them which centres around their vocal abilities, and the Kagamine's focus is on the two opposing vocal packagaes Kagamine Rin and Kagamine Len and are sold as one package. (Two Vocaloids with the same voice provider. She is either choppy or slurry on many of her vowel sounds, and results from other sounds may produce mixed results these issues are caused by her lack of vowel related sounds. As the V2 releases continued and improvements were made to the basic levels of quality, Miku became one of the more dated voicebanks for Vocaloid 2 and is now considered not as smooth as later Vocaloids. It is possible to make her sound realistic, though this requires much work. In terms of realism, Miku's results are not that realistic in comparison the voicebanks that followed her. Within the Vocaloid 2 era voicebanks, only PRIMA matches the same high notes that Miku can achieve, while both tie on being able to hit the highest optimum note of any Vocaloid 2 voicebank library at #E5. Her strength lies in her ability to climb up high into the octaves while maintaining a strong mid-tone range without loosing her cute vocal tone. Voice needs much editing and manipulating to have any emotion, Miku has one of the most emotionless default voices of any Vocaloid. Most popular Vocaloid, though not necessarily the best. His VB works better with the Vocaloid engine than MEIKO's does, mostly due to being two years newer, and his voice is therefore of a slightly higher quality than MEIKO. The style that he is best used for was considered pop ballads. Capable of fitting many genres, allowing him to expand out into ones such as R&B and pop. Her overall tone of voice is more fluid and gives her a large vocal range.
She is fit to sing anything from pop, rock, jazz, R&B to children's songs. Her voice is noted to be steady, straightforward, and suitable for any musical genre. (First-ever Japanese Vocaloid, and first female Japanese Vocaloid. The Japanese Vocaloids make up the majority of the Vocaloid voicebanks, and are the most popular, largely due to the fact that, if you are not a fluent Japanese speaker, you cannot hear the flaws and faults in the voicebanks because you cannot hear the mispronunciations and syllable-butchering (regardless of the language the voicebank sings in, sounds and syllables often come out distorted or are skipped over entirely- yes, even Miku does this!). SeeU sings in Jappanese and Korean, being the first Vocaloid to sing in Korean. Megurine Luka was the first bilingual Vocaloid, singing in both English and Japanese. There are some Japanese Vocaloids who sing in multiple languages.