I’ll get right into this one. Lots of students ask me about recording from home and while it helps to have a real sound-booth with top-of-the-line microphones and equipment, there are LOTS of cost effective ways to take an average room and get a almost-studio sound without breaking the bank. Here are my recommendations for the basic equipment you need to get recording from home:
[NOTE: I am NOT an expert. Engineers and sound designers like George Whittham and his like can tell you all about sound and sound absorption. They can design just the right space for you, long term. This article is meant only to help the novice get started with reasonable recording success while on a budget. Please don’t email me with your corrections and suggestions on how to better engineer a booth or set up. You’d loose me on paragraph one.] Mics today come in several varieties. For the home voice actor there are lots of options out there. Let’s break down your choices and help you to refine your search for the right one:
0 Comments
I get asked this all the time. A lot of people, from all over the world want to know how to do voice over. For some, it's the love of the craft, or of cartoons, or video games or radio or even commercials. For others, it is the lure of fistfuls of cash for showing up to a relatively comfortable studio and talking into a microphone. Still others have been told by innumerable family, friends, coworkers, associates and random people on the street that they have a "great voice" and should look into doing voice over. I started my career locally sending demos to and booking commercials for local ad agencies and other local clients; and it helped A LOT. I only came to the L.A. area when I knew that I wanted to work in Animation VO and there is no other place in the US to really build a career in that field.
Sure, doing voices is a gas for everyone, but many of us can do voices for our friends or imitate our favorite cartoon characters at parties, but can we create real, original, compelling characters that live and breathe and have emotions like real people? Is your heart to try to get rich for goofing off? Or is is to to do what you’ve been created to do and can’t help but doing? I guarantee you that all the people who are making money as voice actors are driven to do it because somewhere inside their design says they MUST. Now, to clarify, what I mean by shame is what many would call negative-self-talk, feeling bad about oneself, being self-critical, or having low self-esteem. If we let ourselves step away from pop-psyche for a moment, all of those things amount to shame - meaning the feeling of worthlessness that comes when we have not met up to a standard. [It is different from guilt: guilt is a legal term that indicates the appropriate feeling of responsibility for known wrong-doing. Shame is guilt applied to someone just for being who they are, regardless of whether they have committed a wrong or not.] Not only is shame the WORST motivator on the planet, but it also forces us to watch our own performance while trying to perform and critique as we go. This is the antithesis of acting! You can’t act and direct at the same time. The moment you start directing yourself out of shame, you stop acting. Then the whole thing falls apart. So you wanna do voice over? Come to grips with the fact that there is no formula and that people, and their hobbies and their professions are all different. |
AuthorThis is the Mick Wingert Website. The blog is by Mick unless otherwise specified. Mick's Bio can be found here. Archives
October 2015
Categories
All
|