The MBROLA is an open source speech engine with collection of diphone voices for speech synthesis. Voices are cost-free for non-commerical purposes, but are not open source.
MBROLA does not include any text-to-phoneme translation, so this must be done by another program. eSpeak NG can be used as a front-end to MBROLA, to provide spelling-to-phoneme translation and intonation, which MBROLA then uses to generate speech sound.
To use a MBROLA voice, eSpeak NG needs information to translate from its own phonemes to the equivalent MBROLA phonemes.
The eSpeak NG voices which use MBROLA are named as:
mb-xxN
where xxN is the name of a MBROLA voice
(e.g. mb-en1 for the MBROLA en1 English
voice). These voice files are in eSpeak NG’s folder
.../espeak-ng-1.52.0/espeak-ng-data/voices/mb (where ... is
usually /usr/share, but could be somewhere else).
There are some additional eSpeak NG MBROLA voices, which speak
English text using a MBROLA voice for a different language. These
contain the name of the MBROLA voice with a suffix -en. For
example, the voice mb-de4-en will speak English text with a
German accent by using the MBROLA de4 voice.
The following MBROLA voices are available in eSpeak NG1.
| MBROLA Voice | Language | Gender | eSpeak | Debian Package |
|---|---|---|---|---|
af1 |
Afrikaans | male | mb-af1 |
mbrola-af1 |
ar1 |
Arabic | male | mb-ar1 |
|
ar2 |
Arabic | male | mb-ar2 |
|
br1 |
Brazillian Portugues | male | mb-br1 |
mbrola-br1 |
br2 |
Brazillian Portugues | male | mb-br2 |
mbrola-br2 |
br3 |
Brazillian Portugues | male | mb-br3 |
mbrola-br3 |
br4 |
Brazillian Portugues | female | mb-br4 |
mbrola-br4 |
bz1 |
Breton | female | ||
ca1 |
Canadian French | male | mb-ca1 |
|
ca2 |
Canadian French | male | mb-ca2 |
|
cn1 |
Mandarin Chinese | female | mb-cn1 |
|
cr1 |
Croatian | male | mb-cr1 |
mbrola-cr1 |
cz1 |
Czech | female | mb-cz1 |
|
cz2 |
Czech | male | mb-cz2 |
mbrola-cz2 |
de1 |
German | female | mb-de1 |
mbrola-de1 |
de2 |
German | male | mb-de2 |
mbrola-de2 |
de3 |
German | female | mb-de3 |
mbrola-de3 |
de4 |
German | male | mb-de4 |
mbrola-de4 |
de5 |
German | female | mb-de5 |
mbrola-de5 |
de6 |
German | male | mb-de6 |
mbrola-de6 |
de7 |
German | female | mb-de7 |
mbrola-de7 |
de8 |
German-Bavarian | male | mb-de8 |
|
ee1 |
Estonian | male | mb-ee1 |
mbrola-ee1 |
en1 |
British English | female | mb-en1 |
mbrola-en1 |
es1 |
Spanish | male | mb-es1 |
mbrola-es1 |
es2 |
Spanish | male | mb-es2 |
mbrola-es2 |
es3 |
Spanish | female | mb-es3 |
|
es4 |
Spanish | male | mb-es4 |
|
fr1 |
French | male | mb-fr1 |
mbrola-fr1 |
fr2 |
French | female | mb-fr2 |
|
fr3 |
French | male | mb-fr3 |
|
fr4 |
French | female | mb-fr4 |
mbrola-fr4 |
fr5 |
Belgian French | male | mb-fr5 |
|
fr6 |
French | male | mb-fr6 |
|
fr7 |
Belgian French | male | mb-fr7 |
|
gr1 |
Greek | male | mb-gr1 |
mbrola-gr1 |
gr2 |
Greek | male | mb-gr2 |
mbrola-gr2 |
hb1 |
Hebrew | male | mb-hb1 |
|
hb2 |
Hebrew | female | mb-hb2 |
|
hn1 |
Korean | male | ||
hu1 |
Hungarian | female | mb-hu1 |
mbrola-hu1 |
ic1 |
Icelandic | male | mb-ic1 |
mbrola-ic1 |
in1 |
Hindi | male | mb-in1 |
|
in2 |
Hindi | female | mb-in2 |
|
id1 |
Indonesian | male | mb-id1 |
mbrola-id1 |
ir1 |
Iranian Persian | male | mb-ir1 |
mbrola-ir1 |
it1 |
Italian | male | mb-it1 |
|
it2 |
Italian | female | mb-it2 |
|
it3 |
Italian | male | mb-it3 |
mbrola-it3 |
it4 |
Italian | female | mb-it4 |
mbrola-it4 |
jp1 |
Japanese | male | mb-jp1 |
|
jp2 |
Japanese | female | mb-jp2 |
|
jp3 |
Japanese | female | mb-jp3 |
|
la1 |
Classical Latin | male | mb-la1 |
mbrola-la1 |
lt1 |
Lithuanian | male | mb-lt1 |
mbrola-lt1 |
lt2 |
Lithuanian | male | mb-lt2 |
mbrola-lt2 |
ma1 |
Malay | female | mb-ma1 |
|
mx1 |
Mexican Spanish | male | mb-mx1 |
mbrola-mx1 |
mx2 |
Mexican Spanish | male | mb-mx2 |
mbrola-mx2 |
nl1 |
Dutch | male | mb-nl1 2 |
|
nl2 |
Dutch | male | mb-nl2 |
mbrola-nl2 |
nl3 |
Dutch | female | mb-nl3 |
|
nz1 |
Maori | male | mb-nz1 |
|
pl1 |
Polish | female | mb-pl1 |
mbrola-pl1 |
pt1 |
Portuguese | female | mb-pt1 |
mbrola-pt1 |
ro1 |
Romanian | male | mb-ro1 |
mbrola-ro1 |
sw1 |
Swedish | male | mb-sw1 |
mbrola-sw1 |
sw2 |
Swedish | female | mb-sw2 |
mbrola-sw2 |
tl1 |
Telugu | female | mb-tl1 |
|
tr1 |
Turkish | male | mb-tr1 |
mbrola-tr1 |
tr2 |
Turkish | female | mb-tr2 |
mbrola-tr2 |
us1 |
American English | female | mb-us1 |
mbrola-us1 |
us2 |
American English | male | mb-us2 |
mbrola-us2 |
us3 |
American English | male | mb-us3 |
mbrola-us3 |
vz1 |
Venezuelan Spanish | male | mb-vz1 |
mbrola-vz1 |
eSpeak NG will look for mbrola voices firstly in
espeak-ng-data/mbrola and then in
/usr/share/mbrola.
The installation instructions below use the MBROLA voice
en1 as an example. You can use other mbrola voices for
which there is an equivalent eSpeak NG voice in
espeak-ng-data/voices/mb.
The SAPI5 version of eSpeak NG uses the mbrola.dll.
Install eSpeak NG. Include the voice mb-en1 in the
list of voices during the eSpeak NG installation.
Install the PC/Windows version of MBROLA
(MbrolaTools35.exe) from: http://www.tcts.fpms.ac.be/synthesis/mbrola/bin/pcwin/MbrolaTools35.exe.
Download the en1 or other voice from: https://github.com/numediart/MBROLA-voices
Save downloaded en1 data file into
C:/Program Files/eSpeak/espeak-ng-data/mbrola.
Use the voice espeak-MB-EN1 from the list of SAPI5
voices.
There are standard packages prepared for MBROLA binary and voices on
different Linux distributions. On Debian/Ubuntu-like Linux, you can
install mbrola using apt-get package manager:
sudo apt-get install mbrola mbrola-en1
where:
mbrola is package containing MBROLA executable,mbrola-en1 is mbrola data files for
en1 MBROLA voice.You can check other available voices searching with command:
apt-cache search mbrola
If some MBROLA voice is not available as Debian package, you can
download data files from https://github.com/numediart/MBROLA-voices
and save them in /usr/share/mbrola/xxN/xxN file, where
xxN is code and number of language file.
sudo apt-get install git make gcc
git clone https://github.com/numediart/MBROLA.git
cd MBROLA
make
sudo cp Bin/mbrola /usr/bin/mbrola
Download the en1 or other voice from https://github.com/numediart/MBROLA-voices
Copy the en1 data file to
/usr/share/mbrola/en1 folder.
If you use the eSpeak NG voice such as mb-en1 then
eSpeak NG will use the mbrola “en1” voice, e.g.:
espeak-ng -v mb-en1 "Hello world"
To generate mbrola phoneme data (.pho file) you can use:
espeak-ng -v mb-en1 -q --pho "Hello world"
or
espeak-ng -v mb-en1 -q --pho --phonout=out.pho "Hello world"
If you have issues with sound system integration, you can pass
MBROLA’s output to standard output, which then can be played by ALSA
(aplay) or PulseAudio (paplay) player throug
the pipe:
espeak-ng -vmb-en1 --stdout "Hello world"|aplay
To add new MBROLA voice entry for eSpeak NG you have to:
These steps are described in details in following sections.
eSpeak NG’s voice files for MBROLA voices are in
espeak-ng-data/voices/mb folder. Voice definition file is
in form mb-xxN and have to contain at least this line:
mbrola <voice> <translation>, e.g.
mbrola en1 en1_phtrans
Where: * en1 is the name of the MBROLA voice. *
en1_phtrans is a translation file to convert between eSpeak
NG phonemes and the equivalent MBROLA phonemes.
If language code differs between MBROLA voice and eSpeak NG language, then additional line is necessary:
language xx
where xx is code of the language in eSpeak NG.
Binary xxN_phtrans files are kept in
espeak-ng-data/mbrola_ph folder and are generated from
phsource/mb/xxN text files, during MBROLA voice
compilation.
Additionally MBROLA voice definition file can have other optional parameters, similar to eSpeak NG voices, which are described Voices file.
MBROLA phoneme translation files specify translations from eSpeak NG phoneme names to mbrola phoneme names.
The source phoneme translation files are in
.../espeak-ng-1.52.0/phsource/mbrola folder and their name is in form
xxN of referenced MBROLA voice.
Note:
eSpeak NG phonemes are referenced from voice files in
phsource folder of particular language e.g.
ph_english and/or general phonemes
file.
MBROLA phonemes are usualy listed in README.txt file
of MBROLA voice.
Each line in the mbrola phoneme translation file contains:
<control> <espeak ph1> <espeak ph2> <percent> <mbrola ph1> [<mbrola ph2>]
<control>
bit 0 (+1) skip the next phoneme
bit 1 (+2) match this and previous phoneme
bit 2 (+4) only at the start of a word
bit 3 (+8) don’t match two phonemes across a word boundary
bit 4 (+16) add this phoneme name as a prefix to the next phoneme name
(used for de4 phoneme prefix ‘?’)
bit 5 (+32) only in stressed syllable
bit 6 (+64) only at the end of a word
<espeak ph1>
The eSpeak NG phoneme which is to be translated to an mbrola
phoneme.
<espeak ph2>
If this field is not NULL, then the match only occurs if
this field matches the next phoneme. If control bit 1 is
set, then the previous rather than the next phoneme is
matched. This field may also have the following values:
VWL
matches any Vowel phoneme.
<percent>
If this field is zero then only one mbrola phoneme is used. If this
field is non-zero, then two mbrola phonemes are used, and this value
gives the percentage length of the first mbrola phoneme.
<mbrola ph1>
The mbrola phoneme to which the eSpeak NG phoneme is translated. This
field may be NULL.
<mbrola ph2>
The second mbrola phoneme. This field is only used if the
<percent> field is not zero.
The list is searched from start to finish, until a match is found. Therefore, a line with more specific match condition should appear before a line which matches the same eSpeak NG phoneme but with a more general condition.
Note:
You can get list (and descriptions) of defined phonemes for
particular eSpeak NG language by entering command in
phsource folder:
egrep "^phoneme " phonemes ph_english|cut -d$' ' -f2-|sort
where ph_english is phoneme definition for particular
language
Note that ph_language file can extend or override
phoneme definitions in phonemes file. Translations for all
defined phonemes should be given in the mbrola phoneme translation
file.
If the language’s *_list or *_rules files
includes rules to speak words “as English” the mbrola phoneme
translation file should include rules which translate English phonemes
into near equivalents, so that they can spoken by the MBROLA voice.
For latest Linux verson of mbrola you can get list of
diphones for particular language by entering command:
mbrola -d /usr/share/mbrola/en1/en1
where /usr/share/mbrola/en1/en1 is location of the voice
file.
When phoneme translation source file is compiled (look at next
section) espeak-ng-data/mbrola_ph/xxN_phtrans file is
created.
Separate MBROLA voice can be compiled using comand:
espeak-ng --compile-mbrola=<xxN>
where xxN is MBROLA voice name.
Makefile.am is build configuration file which should be
extended, to include automatic compilation of newly added MBROLA voice
for eSpeak NG.
Search for mbrola: \ line in Makefile.am
and add additional line for newly created MBROLA voice, e.g.:
mbrola: \
...
espeak-ng-data/mbrola_ph/xxN_phtrans \
Note that it could be that several voices share the same translation
file. Then translation file is named just xx.
When Makefile.am is update, when espek-ng will be
compiled, e.g. by entering command automake; make -B newly
added MBROLA voice will be compiled automatically.
1: You can get list of configured entries for MBROLA synthesizer with following command in espeak-ng project folder:
cd espeak-ng-data/voices/mb/; for i in $(ls); do printf "$i "; grep name $i|awk '{print $2}'; done
2: This voice has very limited set of diphones and is usable only for reading numbers.