Listen to LibriVox Community Podcast #96 hosted by Andy Minter. [audio:http://www.archive.org/download/librivox_community_2009/librivox_community_podcast_096.mp3]
Duration 32:54
Doing the Voices – the Professionals
A podcast showing examples of how professional readers deal with things like cross-sex voices (that is, men reading women’s speech and vice versa), differentiating between characters, and using accents.
Please note this podcast is not in the public domain, as it contains Fair Use excerpts from commercial recordings (each credited by narrator.)
This work is licenced under a Creative Commons Licence.
LibriVox Community Podcast – Serving the Librivox community since 2006
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Shows 01 – 16 (all released in 2006) can be found at: http://www.archive.org/details/librivox_community_2006
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Shows 95 onwards (released in 2009) will be found at http://www.archive.org/details/librivox_community_2009
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Hello Librivox
Cori thank you for the continous dedication to the podcast!!
I love the series on the voices.
Cori your doing a greet job!
Andy thank you for the professional look at voices.
A fan
Thanks, John! I loved this show too … it’s so interesting to hear what other people are up to. I do listen to audiobooks from a range of sources, but Andy did a great job in pulling so many neat examples together. — Cori
Thanks John and Cori for this very interesting podcast. I realize there was a lot of work put to put it together and it is greatly appreciated. It made me stop and think about some of the readings I have done, and what I might do better. It also made me think of some other suggestion for other podcasts (I know we all have so much free time) – timing, speed of narration, and how to handle exclamations – for example, “Wait!”, he cried.
Fascinating comparisons and thank you, Andy, for this compilation. I think my favorite examples are the Scot accents you gave– very difficult to render and that has prevented me from considering any of Mrs. Oliphant’s works; she did sometimes use or imply the burr, which I am incapable of imitating.
Another interesting aspect about reading aloud is that it can sound like, well, somebody *reading*. Yet, audio books are not like acting, so that some professional actors are horrible at audio books or radio plays even with years of voice training. And the problem of the “reading” sound is why only some people can become professionals on radio.
Thank you, again, for this very interesting podcast.