Abstract:We present eCat, a novel end-to-end multispeaker model capable of: a) generating long-context speech with expressive and contextually appropriate prosody, and b) performing fine-grained prosody transfer between any pair of seen speakers. eCat is trained using a two-stage training approach. In Stage I, the model learns speaker-independent word-level prosody representations in an end-to-end fashion from speech. In Stage II, we learn to predict the prosody representations using the contextual information available in text. We compare eCat to CopyCat2, a model capable of both fine-grained prosody transfer (FPT) and multi-speaker TTS. We show that eCat statistically significantly reduces the gap in naturalness between CopyCat2 and human recordings by an average of 46.7% across 2 languages, 3 locales, and 7 speakers, along with better target-speaker similarity in FPT. We also compare eCat to VITS, and show a statistically significant preference.