This is an edit of the ibab/tensorflow-wavenet implementation in TensorFlow for the creation of novel drum sounds.
To get it going, first ensure that TensorFlow is installed on your computer, as well as Theano and Librosa. See below for instructions on how to install the requirements besides TensorFlow.
Once you have the code and packages installed, put some samples in the samples/training/ folder. A good idea is to put some kicks in the samples/training/kicks folder, for example. Then the program is run in the following way (thedetailed explanation is below, this is just the easy version to get something going quick):
python train.py --data_dir='./samples/kicks' --sample_size=88200 --num_steps=100000
note that you should change the data_dir variable to whatever folder you put the samples in, the sample_size defaults to 100000, but generally one second of data is enough for short kicks (the sample_size variable controls essentially the 'width' of the neural network's input), and num_steps to however many iterations you wish for the network to run at. Keep in mind that the system stores checkpoints along the way, so you can cancel the training process at any time and the network architectures will be stored in './logdir/train/some_date_string/' and will be labeled like 'model.ckpt-n' where n is the number of iterations for which the checkpoint was stored.
Once the network has trained, you can generate a sample by using the following code
python generate.py --samples=44100 --wav_out_path=./samples/generated/name_of_file.wav ./logdir/train/some_date_string/model.ckpt-n
and this will use the network architecture stored in './logdir/train/some_date_string/model.ckpt-n' to generate a wav file of length 44100 samples, and with the path being './samples/generated/name_of_file.wav'. More detailed description of generate.py can be found below, as well as looking through the source code and the get_arguments() function that describes all of the parameters we can change on generate init.
More to come!
This is a TensorFlow implementation of the WaveNet generative neural network architecture for audio generation.
The WaveNet neural network architecture directly generates a raw audio waveform, showing excellent results in text-to-speech and general audio generation (see the DeepMind blog post and paper for details). The network models the conditional probability to generate the next sample in the audio waveform, given all previous samples and possibly additional parameters.
After an audio preprocessing step, the input waveform is quantized to a fixed integer range.
The integer amplitudes are then one-hot encoded to produce a tensor of shape A convolutional layer that only accesses the current and previous inputs then reduces the channel dimension. The core of the network is constructed as a stack of causal dilated layers, each of which is a dilated convolution (convolution with holes), which only accesses the current and past audio samples. The outputs of all layers are combined and extended back to the original number of channels by a series of dense postprocessing layers, followed by a softmax function to transform the outputs into a categorical distribution. The loss function is the cross-entropy between the output for each timestep and the input at the next timestep. In this repository, the network implementation can be found in model.py. |
TensorFlow needs to be installed before running the training script.
TensorFlow 0.10 and the current master
version are supported.
In addition, librosa must be installed for reading and writing audio.
To install the required python packages (except TensorFlow), run
pip install -r requirements.txt
You can use any corpus containing .wav
files.
We've mainly used the VCTK corpus (around 10.4GB, Alternative host) so far.
In order to train the network, execute
python train.py --data_dir=corpus
to train the network, where corpus
is a directory containing .wav
files.
The script will recursively collect all .wav
files in the directory.
You can see documentation on each of the training settings by running
python train.py --help
You can find the configuration of the model parameters in wavenet_params.json
.
These need to stay the same between training and generation.
Global conditioning refers to modifying the model such that the id of a set of mutually-exclusive categories is specified during training and generation of .wav file. In the case of the VCTK, this id is the integer id of the speaker, of which there are over a hundred. This allows (indeed requires) that a speaker id be specified at time of generation to select which of the speakers it should mimic. For more details see the paper or source code.
The instructions above for training refer to training without global conditioning. To train with global conditioning, specify command-line arguments as follows:
python train.py --data_dir=corpus --gc_channels=32
The --gc_channels argument does two things: 1) It tells the train.py script that it should build a model that includes global conditioning. 2) It specifies the size of the embedding vector that is looked up based on the id of the speaker.
The global conditioning logic in train.py and audio_reader.py is "hard-wired" to the VCTK corpus at the moment in that it expects to be able to determine the speaker id from the pattern of file naming used in VCTK, but can be easily be modified.
Example output generated by @jyegerlehner based on speaker 280 from the VCTK corpus.
You can use the generate.py
script to generate audio using a previously trained model.
Run
python generate.py --samples 16000 model.ckpt-1000
where model.ckpt-1000
needs to be a previously saved model.
You can find these in the logdir
.
The --samples
parameter specifies how many audio samples you would like to generate (16000 corresponds to 1 second by default).
The generated waveform can be played back using TensorBoard, or stored as a
.wav
file by using the --wav_out_path
parameter:
python generate.py --wav_out_path=generated.wav --samples 16000 model.ckpt-1000
Passing --save_every
in addition to --wav_out_path
will save the in-progress wav file every n samples.
python generate.py --wav_out_path=generated.wav --save_every 2000 --samples 16000 model.ckpt-1000
Fast generation is enabled by default. It uses the implementation from the Fast Wavenet repository. You can follow the link for an explanation of how it works. This reduces the time needed to generate samples to a few minutes.
To disable fast generation:
python generate.py --samples 16000 model.ckpt-1000 --fast_generation=false
Generate from a model incorporating global conditioning as follows:
python generate.py --samples 16000 --wav_out_path speaker311.wav --gc_channels=32 --gc_cardinality=377 --gc_id=311 model.ckpt-1000
Where:
--gc_channels=32
specifies 32 is the size of the embedding vector, and
must match what was specified when training.
--gc_cardinality=377
is required
as 376 is the largest id of a speaker in the VCTK corpus. If some other corpus
is used, then this number should match what is automatically determined and
printed out by the train.py script at training time.
--gc_id=311
specifies the id of speaker, speaker 311, for which a sample is
to be generated.
Install the test requirements
pip install -r requirements_test.txt
Run the test suite
./ci/test.sh
Currently there is no local conditioning on extra information which would allow context stacks or controlling what speech is generated.
- tex-wavenet, a WaveNet for text generation.
- image-wavenet, a WaveNet for image generation.