Updated: January 7 2024

Important - Read First

Synthesizer V Studio Pro is required to do this, as Cross-Language Synthesis is a Pro-only feature.

If you’d like to translate this (especially into Korean) please feel free to! Just link back to this page.

Sample

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uqVYMHUHJEY

Introduction

Starting with the 1.8.0b1 update, Synthesizer V Studio Pro supports Note-Level Cross-Language Synthesis (XLS). This is similar to ACE Studio and VOCALOID6, though Synthesizer V’s implementation makes it completely seamless and fully customizable, with the ability to use any phoneme in any combination from English, Japanese, Mandarin Chinese and Cantonese Chinese. This makes it incredibly easy to mix and match the phonemes to mimic other languages. This is my guide for making Synthesizer V AI vocals sing in Korean.

Notes

I’m always making improvements to this guide, so please contact me if you have any suggestions or findings of your own.

One thing I’d like to highlight is that while the Hangul may be written one way, depending on context the pronunciation of certain things may change, particularly batchim (final consonants). If you’re not sure how it would sound, try to find an example in a song, or have a TTS speak it for you!

Please note that this guide is not a be all and end all, and I encourage everyone to experiment for themselves. These are just the best combinations I’ve found as a student of Korean and Korean music lover!

Codes

🇺🇸 - English

🇯🇵 - Japanese

🇨🇳 - Mandarin Chinese

🇭🇰 - Cantonese Chinese

🏳️ - Any Language

Bold - My personal recommendation!

Vowels