Thanks!

November 15th, 2010 by VoxMan

A quick “thank you” and sincere appreciation to Justin Barrett, an accomplished voice actor who took the time to write up some very detailed feedback on my recent voice blog entries. I am both humbled and grateful for the time spent and the effort it takes to help out in this manner, and I truly appreciate it.

That said, there were a number of great suggestions, which I’ll try to work on incorporating into my technique. Thanks again!

Voice Blog Episode 5

November 14th, 2010 by VoxMan

*Insert Kickass Theme Music*

Voice Blog Episode 5!

A Challenger Appears!

November 14th, 2010 by VoxMan

Just kidding. But a friend of mine, Carrie Standish has started a blog where she’s doing essentially the same thing as I am- beginning a voiceover career. I think this is awesome, and I’m really looking forward to reading what she has to say and share.

Voice Blog Episode Four

November 13th, 2010 by VoxMan

Greetings and welcome- thanks for listening. Check out episode four below. I’ve been tinkering with some of my audio chain settings and I think it didn’t work as well as I wanted to for this one, but it’s all part of the learning process.

Direct download

RSS feed

Voice Blog Day 3

November 12th, 2010 by VoxMan

So tired. Just got home after a 4 hour commute+wolfing down a tavern burger.

However, the voice must go on!

Tomorrow, fun times. I’m so amazingly pleased at how much great feedback I’m getting, and it seems like there’s some real gelling with other aspiring voice artists going on. I’m very excited. 🙂

Voice Blog Episode Two

November 11th, 2010 by VoxMan

Episode Two, for your review. By the way, I’m sorry about the player looking that way, it refuses to resize to a reasonable size.

Direct Link: http://traffic.libsyn.com/coreysnow/VoiceBlog2.mp3

Voice Blog RSS Feed: http://coreysnow.libsyn.com/rss

An Artist’s Workshop? Brilliant!

November 10th, 2010 by VoxMan

First, I want to sincerely thank everyone (all four of you!) who listened to my first voice blog. Your feedback is great!

My friend Carrie, who also attended the class suggested a “Mastermind Group”, sort of a voiceover workshop made up of people wanting to hone their chops and improve their craft. Meet once a month, exchange tips and work in a low-pressure environment.

Words cannot express how awesome an idea this is, so I’m going to work with Carrie on setting this up. I love it that this blog is leading to great results so quickly.

Voice Blog Episode One

November 10th, 2010 by VoxMan

Introduction and background to my new voice blog. I’ll be doing one of these every day (usually) and they’ll be about 5-10 minutes each. This one is a bit longer but I didn’t realize how long I had gone by the time I was done. Another skill to learn!

Please let me know if you have questions or comments.

Voice Blog RSS Feed: http://coreysnow.libsyn.com/rss

Resetting and Taking Stock

November 10th, 2010 by VoxMan

My introduction to voiceover class concluded last week. It actually went quite well, and I recommend that anyone interested in voice work who is in the Puget Sound region contact Scott Burns and/or Barbara Rey; working together they provide a great experience for a neophyte voice actor and a good path forward.

Lessons Learned

So, what have I learned? First, that I’m not as good as I thought I was. Which isn’t surprising; we’re always our own worst judge and biggest cheerleader. My takeaway from the class is that I have good physical talent, a nice voice and the beginnings of what it takes to be where I want to be in the professional voice world.

But only the beginnings. In real terms, I’m just not all that good (yet). The things I’ve noted myself that need work:

  • Natural delivery. I sound stilted or awkward. I also sometimes (often) sound like I’m trying to do a radio voice instead of doing a natural voice. I need to learn to relax and ignore the mic. You would be amazed at how hard this is to do.
  • Character and voice range. I have pretty much a couple of voice sounds I can do consistently; my natural speaking voice and some very basic characters, which often aren’t differentiated from my normal voice enough for someone to pick up on it consistently.
  • Self-Consciousness. When you get up on a mic, you’re supposed to be many things, some of which are mutually exclusive at first glance- you have to be relaxed yet you have to say things that are in a lot of cases difficult to say without cringing. You have to be natural and yet bigger than life. You have to sound normal, but also be distinctive.

What it comes down to is, I think, two things: Improving my acting ability and no longer being selfconscious. These things go hand in hand- consider that acting means getting up in front of people and doing things no one would normally do, in order to entertain.

Next Steps

Before you can act, you have to be totally unselfconscious. Not feeling awkward or embarrased about the things you’re doing or saying is a really hard thing to do- it doesn’t matter if you’re on a stage or behind a mic. In both cases you have an audience and the totally natural impulse is to be worried about what they think. “Was I too loud? Did that last line work? Did they believe it? Do they hate me?”

I have to work on losing that self-conscious aspect, to simply throw myself into the moment and not care about what people think until after I’m done.

Taking it Up a Notch

I think a lot of people explore the world of voice work, get about to where I am now and simply walk away because it isn’t easy. Well, nothing worth doing is, and you’re not going to see me give up on what has essentially been my dream for the last 25 years. The challenge is that I have to make a living in the meantime, and I’m the sole wage-earner in my household. I can’t just run off and do whatever, so I have to make sure I work toward my goals without breaking the bank, losing my job, or hurting my family.

So first, I’ve taken down my demos. They were terrible and I shouldn’t have had them up, but I simply didn’t realize how bad they were until I got into some training. I’m now at a stage where I realize that yeah, I’m no great shakes, but I know where I need to go in order to get to my goal.

Second, I’m going to do a daily voice blog. This will be short, raw and will focus on developing my improvisational skills and learning how to be relaxed and natural behind the mic. I get up at 5 AM and get home at 8 PM every day. I simply can’t go take an improv acting course easily. I have to pick and choose the classes I attend to fit in the budget and time constraints at hand, but that doesn’t mean I have to just do nothing in the meantime.

The first voice blog will be tonight. I hope you enjoy it!

An Actual, Paying Gig

September 30th, 2010 by VoxMan

I was quite surprised a few days ago to get a proposition via Voice123 to voice a small web ad. It’s not huge amounts of money and it’s only 10 words, but it’s actual, paying work! This officially marks my entry into the world of pro voice acting, in the sense that “pro”==”getting paid”. I’m quite chuffed about it.

In other news, I had my second iteration of the VO class I mentioned last week, and it went very well again. It’s interesting to watch the people in the class and hear their delivery morph even as you watch and listen into something better. I don’t think everyone in that class will end up being a pro voice artist, but there are a few seriously talented people in it. I think I’m in that category, but it’s very difficult to judge your own performance.

I sent off the tracks to the studio for the paying job last night and once it goes “live” (assuming they like what I sent) with the ad, I’ll see if I can provide a link to it from here.