1. A few excellent ideas

    Brian Haymond has been blogging about voiceover here for a few weeks now and has just added a secong blog to his roster focused on podcasts, promos, commercials, imaging, TV, video and narration.

    But, it’s his first blog to which I want to call your attention today, because Brian offers some very useful and practical suggestions of things to do in between your times of finding work and actually doing voiceovers. I’m going to implement some of his suggestions immediately (a few I’ve already been doing) and you should probably think about doing the same.

  2. This is what I love to see

    Over the course of the last few months, I’ve worked several times for a production company in California called Point7West. Every script they’ve sent me has been a sheer pleasure to read. Not just good copy, great copy. Consistently so.

    Then today, I get an email from them letting me know their client loved the work I did for them last week for Wheeling Hospital. And letting me know that the agency would like to talk with me directly about possibly doing some radio commercials. Now how cool is that?

    So, thank you Point7West!

  3. Source-Connect

    A number of years ago ISDN revolutionized the voiceover business, by making it possible to get studio quality audio from one city to another, even from one part of the world to another over digital phone lines. All that was needed were about $5000.00 work of gadgetry on both ends, and the special ISDN digital phone service ($400 to install and $75 a month for the service) installed at each location.

    Now, a company called Source Elements is revolutionizing the voiceover business again with a remarkable piece of software called Source-Connect. Initially Source-Connect was only available as a plug-in to ProTools. But now, they’ve released a version that works as a VST plug-in with a much wider range of software. (A list of the officially supported host programs can be found here.)

    I’m using ProTools 7.1 M-powered and this morning, after unsuccessfully fussing with Source-Connect for a few days, my friend and fellow voiceover guy Dan Nachtrab helped me over the last couple of hurdles. The magic bullet was that once we had connected with one another, I had to put my system into “record” mode so that I could hear him. Dan could hear me right away, but that’s because he already knew about this step.

    Dan and I chatted with one another for several minutes, with me still using the free evaluation version of the program, and it sounded as good as or better than an ISDN session. I mean, if you’re not familiar with how that sounds, it sounded like we were in the same room. Yes, believe it. Highly recommended.

  4. Synchronicity

    One of my favorite commercials of all time.

  5. It’s always nice to find a new one

    Ralph Hass is a fine voiceover talent who has just started a blog about voiceover work. I’m always delighted to find another voiceover blogger.

    Now, Ralph’s only been doing this for a week, so give him some time to build up his archives. But, bookmark him now so we can enjoy watching his site grow together.

  6. Sound and the web

    Elaine Singer, a voiceover talent who specializes in audiobooks and other long form narrations, blogs about her voiceover work here. (You can hear her demos here.)

    While reading her blog today, I clicked through to an interesting article she’s written about the question of using audio on your website. You can read the article here. It’s well worth a few minutes of your time.

  7. Just a little housekeeping

    I’ve added a category to my blogroll on the left, “Voiceover blogs.” I wanted to separate out the voiceover blogs that I’ve found from my other blogging friends so if you’re mainly interested in voiceover stuff (and why you would spend much time at this blog if that isn’t true, I have no idea) you can find it more easily.

    And by the way, if you’ve stumbled across anyone else involved in voiceover work and who is actively blogging (or even inactively blogging) please leave me a comment and let me know.

  8. If you do a lot of auditioning in person

    Pat Fraley offers a superb tip at the Voiceover Bulletin Board. It’s a way to give yourself a leg up that is sheer genius. The thread is called “Getting a 50% edge in an audition.”

    Go, read, be amazed.

  9. The latest podcast is up

    As I’ve noted before, one of the fun things I get to do every quarter is work on the “bridges” podcasts for the Office of Science and Technology at the Embassy of Austria in Washington, DC.

    The last few days have been filled with recording the latest round of articles. You’ll find all of the podcasts for “bridges” Vol. 11, as well as previous releases, here. Just keep scrolling for the older material.

    Let me know what you think. And my thanks to the wonderful folks at the OST for the opportunity to work with them.

  10. An audition adventure (update)

    My friend Mary C. McKitrick shares this riviting tale on her blog about traveling into New York City for an audition. Since I don’t have a Blogger account, I can’t leave a comment on her blog, but I’m glad she’s OK. And I hope she gets cast from the audition. That would be very cool.

    Update: It turns out that Mary’s account allows comments from people without Blogger accounts, so I’ve left a comment there after all.
    (edited to add a link to Mary’s blog, and the update)

  11. Something cool happened today (updated)

    If you’ve read any significant number of my archived posts, you’ve noticed that I think very highly of Pat Fraley as a voiceover coach. In fact, he and Dick Orkin have been the two teachers with the greatest influence on my voiceover work. (Not that I’m worthy to even carry the shoes of either of these guys, but I am deeply grateful for what they’ve taught me.)

    So, what was the cool thing? Susan Berkley, by all that I’ve heard a very fine teacher and voiceover talent herself, sent me an email asking if she could use a quote from me about Pat; as part of her promotion of an upcoming Audiobook Master Class with Pat to be held in New York in early November.

    Well of course, I said, “Yes!” and thanked her. I also recorded a copy of my comments and sent them to her in case she wants to use the audio on her site as well as the text.

    Now, I haven’t studied with Susan, but as I said, she has a very good reputation. And Pat is one of the real masters in not only delivering the goods himself in the studio, but also in teaching others how to develop. If you live on the East Coast and you’ve wanted to study with Pat Fraley, and especially if you’re interested in pursuing audiobook narrations, this is a great opportunity. Click here for the information page about the class.

    Oh, the quote?

    The Audiobook Master Class presented by Pat Fraley was everything I hoped it would be and more. It was really 3 master classes in one. Having now attended three training events with Pat Fraley, I strongly recommend you jump at your next chance to take one of his classes. The price of the event was worth every penny based what I learned. I’ve just been signed by an audiobook publisher (science fiction, one of my personal favorite genres) and I completed my first project for them last night.
    Bob Souer, Voice Over Talent, Charlotte, NC

    (edited to fix typos and updated with the link to Susan’s Audiobook class page)

  12. The voiceover advantage

    My friend Anthony Garcia blogs at A Day in the Life of a Persuasion Architect, along with several other talented folks including Bryan and Jeffrey Eisenberg.

    A couple of days ago in a post on the blog, Anthony made a point about the reality that the best designed web site in the world can’t hold a candle to the full-body experience of a real live brick-and-mortar store. But, there is one advantage to the online world, words. Well written web pages can create atom-splitting mental images.

    I’m pointing you to this blog post because I want you to realize that you have the responsiblity to make this idea take life when you read the copy you’ve been cast to read. Your performance can either bring those words to life and it can suck the life right out of them. Are you ready to deliver a life-enchancing performance?

  13. How much is a voiceover worth?

    This question came to mind this evening as I was reading Brian Haymond’s blog, and in particular this post. His comments center around two of the key online voiceover casting services, Voices.com and Voice123.com. Brian quotes some sample lines from emailed leads from these services.

    “Best price gets first consideration”…”Budget is $50″…”Small budget but lots of volume”…”2 hours of finished audio, budget $150″…the list goes on and on and on!

    And as Brian notes there are misconcpetions about what a voiceover is worth.

    $100 a minute is more than a doctor makes

    But, the central point of Brian’s post is that professional voiceover services are just that, professional.

    This work can’t be performed by just anyone. [snip] you wouldn’t check with your friend who is a vet and ask if he can cut you a deal on removing your bad tooth.

    The main problem is that real professionals make voiceover work sound like it’s nothing more than talking. Just like professional actors make their performances seem completely transparent. So, anyone even remotely interested in voiceover work is lulled into thinking anyone can do it. Hey, after all, everybody knows how to talk, right?

    Yes, but not everybody knows how to speak well. I have a dear friend who still doesn’t know how to to use “seen” and “saw” correctly. Wonderful person. Just not that great with some aspects of grammar. And that’s at least part of the point here. Professional voiceover work should be invisible. And people who are really good at getting out of the way and letting the story tell itself, they get paid well for their work.

    So, if you’re just looking for a cheap voice, you’re welcome to stay and read as much as you like. Write comments if you like. But, I’m not the cheapest voice you’re going to find. My solution to the emails that Brian quoted above? I hit the delete button and move on.

    It doesn’t really trouble me that people audition for and take jobs with low budgets. Because this isn’t competition. It’s about giving clients the opportunity to choose the right voice and the right talent for their job.

    There will continue to be lots of work at that low budget level and the folks interested in it will get that work, but I will continue not to worry about it because I’m deleting those projects and concentrating on the opportunities coming from people looking for real professionals.

    Eventually people with serious money on the line will learn that you can’t get professional work from someone who charges that kind of rate and will adjust their budgets accordingly. And when they do, I (and Brian, a host of other talented folks, some of whom are linked here on the left) will be here ready to deliver the goods.

  14. Behind the scenes at a live awards show

    Joe Cipriano blogs here. From time to time he also posts video on his site, as I’ve mentioned before. And, his post of August 31st gives you a chance to watch from the voiceover booth of an awards show, specifically the 2006 Primetime Emmy Awards.

    Watch and enjoy.

    And thanks to by buddy Charlie Glaize for tipping me to Joe’s post.

  15. As I mentioned in my last post…

    One of the cool things I’ve been cast in recently, is the voice of the trailer for a new animated Christmas program. Andy Griffith plays one of the lead parts. You can see the trailer here. But, be advised it’s a 7 Meg Quicktime file, so it’s going to take a few minutes to load, even on a broadband connection.

    This is hot off the press, as the old saying goes. So hot, that as I post this note, their web page isn’t up yet. But, I wanted you folks to be the first to know abou this.

    And, let me know what you think.

  16. On my mind today…

    Is a thought that’s appeared here a time or two before. I never cease to be amazed by the projects I get to work on from here in Charlotte, NC, USA.

    I’ll post details about at least some of these in the not too distant future, but in the last 3 months I’ve narrated 2 documentaries that are being distributed on PBS, the trailer for a new animated Christmas special, podcasts for the Embassy of Austria’s Office of Science and Technology, imaging voice tracks for radio stations from Florida to Chicago and on out to San Francisco, e-learning modules about multi-function printer/fax/scanner devices from Canon, part of a short story SciFi audiobook collection, and national public service announcements encouraging parents to read to their children. And a bunch more stuff that I don’t want to bore you with.

    Wow! This is so much better than working for a living. (And having grown up in the farm country of central Minnesota, I can tell you, I know what working for a living feels like.) So. Much. Better.

  17. Meet the Bloggers

    The BBC has interviewed a number of bloggers, including the Instapundit, Glenn Reynolds; from whose blog I learned about the interview. You can read Glenn’s post here and get the audio of the interview, here. (updated to add a link to BBC Radio)

  18. Writing well

    I believe one’s voiceover work can improve signicantly by writing. I suppose this blog is an attempt, at least at one level, to test that theory since I do spend a fair amont of time writing here.

    But the real purpose of this post is to point you to an article by Peter Drew that’s he’s posted here. Good thoughts, which are well worth a few minutes of your time.

  19. A quick word of thanks

    to David Houston for his very kind comments on his voiceover blog called “Do That Voice,” about me and this blog. Thank you David. Much continued success to you.

  20. I mentioned it in the interview…

    But only at the end, so let me highlight that Dan Nachtrab has a blog. While it’s not updated every day, he was kind enough to post about his inteview here, as well as link to a couple of others among my favorite voiceover people.

    Thanks, for the post, Dan. I wish you much continued success.

  21. Behind the scenes of an animation session

    TV Squad is a blog about television. Richard Keller posted some fascinating video from a session for the series Family Guy there in a post on July 14th and I just stumbled across it today.

    Check it out
    .

  22. James Earl Jones

    Among the many people profiled at the Academy of Achievement site is James Earl Jones. Enjoy. A thanks goes to Anthony for his post on the Voiceover Bulletin Board that pointed me to this site.)

  23. Interview 2, Dan Nachtrab

    This post is the second of what I hope to be a significant number of interviews with people I think you need to meet, and who have valuable and important advice and comments.

    We’re talking this time with Dan Nachtrab because he has a real handle on the business side of this business. In addition he’s a very talented guy (you can listen to his demos here to see what I mean), but if you haven’t picked up on this yet; while voiceover can be a hobby for a long time; if you’re going to pursue it as a career, you have to look at it as the business it is. As you’ll see, Dan has some worthwhile insights.

    My first question for Dan: Compared to what you thought it would be like, what has been the most unexpected aspect of being a voiceover talent?

    Dan: A while back my father shared a thought with me. “One day,” he said, “the business will overtake your art.” He was right. There are many steps in keeping your business in line. I had to stop treating VO as a hobby and push myself to make it my business.

    My second question for Dan: Why do you pursue voiceover work rather than something else? Have you at times in the past? If so, what?

    Dan: Why does a fish swim? I truly believe, in my heart, I was born for this line of work. Even when I strayed from the VO path and accepted a couple “real” jobs, like selling copiers, I kept my foot in the “VO door.” A gig here, a gig there. The best part about the sales job was that I learned how to communicate with all types of people and cold call prospective clients. That experience helped me immensely in pursuing voiceover.

    My third question: What was the sequence that led to your concentration on voiceover now? What precipitated the change?

    Dan: First, let me say this: Every time I crack open the mic, I try to better myself from the last time. There is never a throwaway line for me. So, I guess I can say I have always concentrated on VO. It is an art, and I will always be a student.

    Now, on to how I got to where I am now…

    After the sales job, I tried my hand at radio management. I was promoted five times in three and a half years from weekend talk show host to assistant program director for three stations to marketing director. I was educated in organization, management of personnel and marketing. During that time, I had acquired a few large voiceover clients. Soon after, radio and I parted ways, and the voiceover business became my “bread and butter.” All of the skills I used while in management, I use everyday in VO.

    Believe it or not, the fantastic people at VO-BB.COM gave me the confidence to make the jump. I answered “yes” to five of the six questions Frank Frederick posted (in the linked thread) and knew it was time.

    My fourth question: How do you deal with rejection?

    Dan: I don’t. First rule in acting is to audition and then forget the audition ever took place. If you get the call back, great! If you don’t, you will not be devastated about not getting the gig. Auditioning is serious business. Some say it is the business. If you can’t handle yourself in a professional manner while under pressure to perform, if you can’t take criticism or direction, or if you get upset when someone doesn’t like your voice, then you shouldn’t be in this business.

    My fifth question: Taking the other side of my first question, what (if anything) has turned out to be most like your expectations, going in?

    Dan: Chicks dig it. Seriously, my wife and daughter couldn’t be more proud. They often wake up and see the old man sitting in his underwear cutting a narration for the United States Department of Defense. It is a pretty sight.

    My sixth question: To the degree that you’re comfortable, describe your process of finding work? Are there things you concentrate on? What works better than others? What are you not going to repeat?

    Dan: Right now, having three agents helps a lot. Also, whenever I have a client with whom I really get along, I will simply ask if they know anyone who may need my services. Most likely they do and they provide their names and numbers. The great thing about this tactic is that you have an immediate reference from your current client and an icebreaker with the new client. (I was taught this strategy while working in sales.)

    In addition, I will not randomly mail out CD demos. A phone call to the prospective client can save you a lot of money and time. How can you otherwise guarantee that the agency deals with VO and isn’t merely a print agency?

    My seventh question: Has anything memorably embarrassing ever happened to you in the booth? If so, what happened?

    Dan: Nothing too embarrassing, per se. Although, a few laughs have been shared over jokes I wouldn’t repeat to my mother. (And no, I will not take a follow-up question.)

    No problem, Dan. No follow-up is needed for that one!

    My thanks to Dan Nachtrab for taking time from his busy schedule to answer all of these questions. There’s a link to Dan’s main site above (as well as on my voiceover blogroll to the left), and to his blog about voiceover here.

  24. Terri Apple

    Backstage.com has an interview with voiceover pro Terri Apple that’s well worth a few minutes of your time.

  25. The 3 C’s of auditioning

    Bonnie Gillespie is a casting director (mainly for independent films) in Los Angeles. She also writes a must read column every Monday called The Actor’s Voice. Seriously, you should read her every Monday.

    This week’s column is a case in point, and though she’s writing about auditioning for on camera work in film or television, the principles apply precisely the same way in the voiceover world.

    You have to have the right character or voice for the part. You have to make the right choices about the way you approach the audition script. And you have to be committed to those choices. Exceptionally good stuff, Bonnie.

    And yes, the previous post is also about Bonnie and her book, Self – Management for Actors. So, if you can afford a few bucks, buy her book; but even if you can’t read The Actor’s Voice, on-line.

  26. The most useful book you’ll read on voiceover this year

    And it’s not even a book about voiceover! It’s called Self – Management for Actors and it’s written by Bonnie Gillespie. Her Actor’s Voice column is must reading every Monday. And her book, Self – Management for Actors, gives you the kind of practical and useful information you need in order to approach the business of voiceover as both a business and an art. Do you get the idea? I think this will be the best under $20 purchase you’ll make this year.

  27. Do what you want to do

    How do you measure success? How do you know when you’ve “made it,” what ever “it” is? These are questions you have to face if you’re going to make a go at the voiceover business.

    Drew Haldwall is a talented guy, not only in his voiceover work, but in other creative ways. He’s very gifted in wood craftsmanship. He tells me it’s the combination of work that he finds satisfying.

    That’s what works for Drew. What about you? Leave me a comment, if you like. I’d love to hear your answer to that question.

  28. Habit forming? Oh yes!

    Mary C. McKitrick has learned just how habit forming it is to study with the one and only Pat Fraley. Read about Mary’s latest encounter with Pat on her blog, here. I just wish I lived in New England so I could have fed my Pat habit, too.

  29. A podcast worth hearing

    Gary Joy does an online radio show called “The Casting Couch Radio Show” and I think you ought to consider adding it to the places you visit and with which you stay up to date. Good stuff.

  30. Even if it was just the first lines from a commercial…

    I thought this was worth sharing:

    “Amateurs work until they get it right. Professionals work until they can’t get it wrong.”

    (Heard as part of the sponsor imaging for Monday Night Football this evening.)

    I posted this on the Voiceover Bulletin Board, too; but wanted to be sure to put it up here as well.

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