Are You Interested in a Voice Over Career but Uncertain or Confused Where to Begin? At Aliso Creek Voice Over Classes we'll guide you through everything you need to know to build the successful voice over career of your dreams.
Voice Over work is an exciting career but you need training to develop professional voice-over skills to participate effectively in this industry. You often have just a few moments to analyze and interpret copy in an audition or a job.
Opportunities exist for voice-over in commercials, animation, narration, industrial videos, plus new technologies such as Video Games, Digital Video and the Internet.
We cover audition skills, copy interpretation, character development, inflection, microphone technique and sight reading skills plus the marketing and business skills you need to have a successful career.
Let's work together to make your voice over goals a reality! Give us a call at: 818-954-9931 or go to our website for more information.
Honestly, I don't have much of an interest in doing voice-over work. I'm here because I want to become a better narrator when reading aloud to my future wife, children, and students, as I have a deep love for stories, spoken and written, and I will most certainly be reading to my family, and maybe to my students when I become a teacher. Still, thank you for this video; this is just what I was looking for! I will likely return to this video a few times in order to recall these pieces of advice, should I forget them, and practice them as well. Thank you!
Sub-vocalizing is the only way I have ever been able to read. Saying the words in my head as I see them and always only at one pace. About 190 WPM. What is the method you mean, where the eyes are ahead of the mouth. How does that work?
I think I am perfectly cut out for this. I've had a unique set of experiences that improved the skills needed in just the right way, and I already read more books than anyone I know. I don't know that many people, so I'm sure it wouldn't be considered 'a lot' to some of you out in this comments section.
I just got my first project through ACX. First-time narrator Before this, I was in vocal music I already own: Shure SM58 dynamic condensor XLR mic Popfilter Isolation ball Shockmount Mic stand with boom arm Isolation shield IRig Pro Duo interface Laptop PC with Audacity and ACX plugin and large monitor to read material My biggest issue is sound proofing. I have a designated recording space that I have tried to soundproof, because reverb is a huge problem. Am I good to go? I'm really nervous about this. My auditions have all met ACX standards. Should I record in Audacity, or can I just use the voice recorder app on my computer and upload the files to Audacity?
My old insurance agent from Manning SC told me a decade ago I should go into radio, he said he had a buddy in radio in Florence SC and that I should go visit him, I never did. Since then I've been in the background three TV shows several different seasons and featured in a few scenes. Now I'm auditioning for my first short film. I wish I had visited when I had the chance but Gods getting me right where i needed to be
Excellent video! I use a professional quality Harlan Hogan, "Porta-Booth," instead of a homemade one that works wonders. I'm definitely going to try out the moving blanket setup.
İngilizce pek bilmiyorum ama en büyük hedeflerimden birisi de İngilizce seslendirme ve dublaj çalışmaları yapmak. Dili sıfırdan öğrenen biri için bunun imkansız olduğunu duyduğumda derin bir üzüntü duymuştum
You do not need to be fluent in English to do English Text Voice Over. You just need to be able to read and pronounce English well enough to be understood. Of course you do need to understand the meaning and the context of the words. But you don't need to create the words. They are provided in the script. Practice reading English. İyi şanslar!
Thank you sir, I was always told it would not happen, so I stopped practicing about 1 year ago, I will start again as soon as possible, thank you for your time, it gave me hope. (I apologize if there were mistakes because I wrote using translation)
I've been hanging out in various writing and publishing groups on Facebook for a while now. There is a sharp increase in the number of authors recommending AI for audiobook narration. Yes, they know the quality is not quite there yet, but they don't care. Self publishing authors (a substantial portion of the audiobook base) are far more concerned about costs than quality. Don't forget: WalMart didn't beat Sears because the quality of the products became just as good. It beat Sears because they offered cheaper prices.
This video does come across as saying that voice over is dying, and the advice is to branch out into podcasting, sound engineering and more, have I missed something? Love the name however. William Williams, same as my Welsh Grandfather!
Or, if you like voice over, specialize in areas that require understanding the intent of the writing and use acting, word emphasis and inflection to bring out that intent. I was named in honor of my Welsh grandfather's brother, who died in World War I. Cymru am byth
It's true - today. But AI is getting better ALL the time, and eventually (pretty soon, I suspect), synthesized voices will be the norm for voice overs, even for major jobs like network TV commercials.