Hear your progress, one recording at a time
VoxAccalia supports gender-affirming voice practice with simple acoustic feedback: how high your voice sounds, how bright or warm it feels in the mouth, and whether today’s clip sits closer to where you started or where you want to be. Record standard read-aloud passages for comparable takes, or upload your own audio.
What you can do here
- Record passages or upload
- Read a standard passage in the browser (Rainbow, Grandfather, and more) so your takes stay comparable, or upload WAV, MP3, and similar files. Each clip gets a title and a private analysis.
- See clear scores
- Pitch, resonance (formants), and how expressive your pitch is are turned into percentages and charts—not a diagnosis, but a training mirror.
- Track and compare
- Charts on the progress page, side-by-side compare for two takes, personal “starting” and “goal” baselines, and search or filter past recordings by title or passage.
- Share when you choose
- Keep clips private by default. Turn on a share link when you want someone else to hear a recording and see its scores—links expire unless you refresh them.
- Practice tips
- After each clip, short feeling-based drills tied to your pitch and resonance scores—what to try next for resonance, pitch habits, and articulation, not fixed Hz targets. The demo shows one tip; accounts unlock the full list and passage-trend suggestions as you build history.
From people who practice here
“Finally being able to see my pitch and resonance change over weeks instead of just guessing from memory has made a huge difference to how I approach practice.”
“VoxAccalia has been such an incredible resource on my voice journey so far! It took a little time for me to learn and get used to the huge amount of wonderful info the program gives you, but now that I have, I find it so easy and effortless to keep track of my progresss and keep improving.”
Built for practice, not labels
Scores describe acoustic patterns that tend to shift listener perception in voice studies. In this app, they’re shown as a practice index from acoustic cues—not as identity labels or pass/fail judgments. They do not define who you are. Use them the way you would a tuner or mirror—for your own goals.
Read the full explanation →VoxAccalia is free to use and ad-free. One-time donations help cover hosting, analysis, and ongoing development.
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