/tacotron2

Tacotron 2 - PyTorch implementation with faster-than-realtime inference

Primary LanguageJupyter NotebookBSD 3-Clause "New" or "Revised" LicenseBSD-3-Clause

Tacotron 2 (without wavenet)

PyTorch implementation of Natural TTS Synthesis By Conditioning Wavenet On Mel Spectrogram Predictions.

This implementation includes distributed and fp16 support and uses the LJSpeech dataset.

Distributed and FP16 support relies on work by Christian Sarofeen and NVIDIA's Apex Library.

Visit our website for audio samples using our published Tacotron 2 and WaveGlow models.

Alignment, Predicted Mel Spectrogram, Target Mel Spectrogram

Pre-requisites

  1. NVIDIA GPU + CUDA cuDNN

Setup

  1. Download and extract the LJ Speech dataset
  2. Clone this repo: git clone https://github.com/NVIDIA/tacotron2.git
  3. CD into this repo: cd tacotron2
  4. Initialize submodule: git submodule init; git submodule update
  5. Update .wav paths: sed -i -- 's,DUMMY,ljs_dataset_folder/wavs,g' filelists/*.txt
    • Alternatively, set load_mel_from_disk=True in hparams.py and update mel-spectrogram paths
  6. Install PyTorch 1.0
  7. Install python requirements or build docker image
    • Install python requirements: pip install -r requirements.txt

Training

  1. python train.py --output_directory=outdir --log_directory=logdir
  2. (OPTIONAL) tensorboard --logdir=outdir/logdir

Multi-GPU (distributed) and FP16 Training

  1. python -m multiproc train.py --output_directory=outdir --log_directory=logdir --hparams=distributed_run=True,fp16_run=True

Inference demo

  1. Download our published Tacotron 2 model
  2. Download our published WaveGlow model
  3. jupyter notebook --ip=127.0.0.1 --port=31337
  4. Load inference.ipynb

N.b. When performing Mel-Spectrogram to Audio synthesis, make sure Tacotron 2 and the Mel decoder were trained on the same mel-spectrogram representation.

Related repos

WaveGlow Faster than real time Flow-based Generative Network for Speech Synthesis

nv-wavenet Faster than real time WaveNet.

Acknowledgements

This implementation uses code from the following repos: Keith Ito, Prem Seetharaman as described in our code.

We are inspired by Ryuchi Yamamoto's Tacotron PyTorch implementation.

We are thankful to the Tacotron 2 paper authors, specially Jonathan Shen, Yuxuan Wang and Zongheng Yang.