Type any script. Hear it back in that Kosovan-British low-mid speaking register — the one that runs every Vogue cover-read, every At Your Service podcast intro, every editorial brand voiceover. Cool, dry, not pushing. Studio-quality MP3 in under a minute. No software to install. Built on HyperVoice, our proprietary neural TTS engine.
Dua Lipa speaks in a low-mid London register that grew up in Kosovo, finished school in West London, and learned its on-camera composure during a decade of fashion press. The voice sits noticeably lower than her singing voice. The cadence is measured. The vowels are British-modern with the Kosovan baseline underneath — not RP, not Estuary, something cleaner than both. That register is why every brand campaign and editorial podcast wants her voiceover.
TaskAGI's Dua Lipa AI voice generator runs on HyperVoice, our proprietary text-to-speech engine. The model captures that cool, dry, editorial speaking register specifically — the low-mid placement, the modern-London vowels, the considered pace of someone who runs her own podcast and a 60-million-stream career and does not need to perform either.
Four presets cover the modes. Editorial is the default Vogue-cover-read register, cool and a touch dry. Podcast warms it up for long-form conversation voice. Press tightens for red-carpet and on-camera junket reads. Reflective drops the energy and adds a hint of the personal-essay register she uses on At Your Service.
Creators reach for this voice when a script needs editorial cool without sounding cold. Fashion-magazine voiceover. Pop-music documentary cold-opens. Long-form interview-podcast intros. Editorial-brand campaign reads. Reflective long-form essay narration. The voice does work that a generic young-female TTS cannot do because it carries a specific learned calmness — the calmness of someone who has been on a red carpet a hundred times and is not impressed by the next one.