As I continue to perfect my audio editing skills and continue to edit my writing in the prep process I also have been doing practice recordings as a tease for my final product. I have a small select audience that is giving me constructive feedback. I have an editor that is a goddess or maven I cant decide.
I recently go a new mic and it came with Sonar LE which is cool but has a learning curve for me. I am tempted to go back to Audacity for the short term - but then I would not learn anything new.
The problem or the problem so I think is my voice. I "think" I have convinced myself that I don't have the right voice to express my story the way I would like to hear it. All of my sample audience seems to be pleased with my voice or some are lying to me.
How do I overcome what I feel - Writers/Readers please help me?
I keep telling myself that not everyone in the English speaking world has heard my voice before - therefore they have no idea how I think it should sound with what I am reading. I am certain that the same applies to you.
I just put up some sample content at podcast.thinkingcaveman.org and found the gumption to hard record my first 25 pages for final post now I just have to get my sequencing of how I want my written intro's to appear - keeping with consistency you know
Listened to your test audio. Your voice will work great. You are having issues with 'plosives, though (the b's the p's, the t's, etc.). Some of this might be the mic you are using... one thing to try (if it is a headset mic) is to place the mic around chin level so you are not speaking directly into the mic.
If it is a freestanding microphone, a pop filter would work well for you. Good luck!
Hi, I just listened to the sample where you discuss the Common attribution. At least I think it is you! The two samples are so different. Anyway, this sample was fine. I would have no trouble listening to your voice. If you are using the setup and mic that was used for the sample of the story, then you do need a popscreen as PG said. It takes a while before we like our own voice. We never sound like we think we should, but you are doing fine.
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