Entries Tagged as 'voiceover blog'

reinforcing the art of voice acting

Chris Greene and Tess Spangler take instruction from Toni Silveri at The Western New York Voice Actors Workshop

Performance ruts are the bane of any actor: stage, television or voice.

Yet left to our own devices (and ultimately ALL of us are) we can mindlessly fall into these ruts… a kind of “sameness” in performance that hurts a script, a vocal tic that we ourselves don’t notice, a subtle elocution mistake…or anyone one of a myriad of other problems that a producer might not be bothered by, a client wouldn’t even notice but is stuff that we as performers are responsible (if only to ourselves) for avoiding or fixing.

You might say – ‘well if the producer or the client doesn’t care, why should I?’

My short answer is: because it’s your job as a voice over performer.

My longer answer is: if that’s you’re attitude about your voice over performances, this post and probably this blog are not for you.

Smart performers know that in addition to guts checks and their own eyes/ears, they need omniscient observers. Call them coaches, trainers or whatevers, be it individually or in a group, this resource helps keep performers honest.

My life schedule does not always allow for regular voice acting classes but when it does, I have a wonderful place to go.

The Western New York Voice Actors Workshop is an amazing resource in our area, similar to the many architectural, geological, artistic, historical and human treasures with have in our area (aside from civic pride, there are facts and history on each of those areas to back up the “treasure” claim).

The Workshop exists because of one person but is successful because of many. For me, this is how my journey with the workshop began and how the art of voice acting is reinforced for me.

Toni Silveri, who has held her weekly Workshop for many, many years prior to my involvement, hosted a local workshop starring Pat Fraley some years ago. That was the first time I met her (as well as Pat) and it was also about the time she was starting her voice talent agency, All Coast Talent. At the end of the Fraley seminar, she asked if she could sign me to her agency and I did.

But I didn’t immediately join her classes. Not sure why (probably time constraints) but eventually I did that too. As Robert Frost once wrote “…and that has made all the difference.”

So what’s the difference and why does it benefit me? I’ll gladly tell you but to what effect I don’t know because learning is a deeply personal and individual activity. How this class impacts me might cause a different reaction for you (not better, not worse, just different). You have to find what works for you.

For me, I need the omniscient listener…that’s Toni. Whether I am not delivering on a performance or whether she has a new idea to insert or whether she has just one minor note to give me – it registers. In my head it usually clicks and allows me to both do as she’s asked of me and also make a mental note to hold onto that nugget for another time. Her ability to crystallize her direction for a performer is a gift. By it, Toni is sharing the tools she’s collected over her years of performing and taking stage acting and voice acting classes. As just one example, I find it a bit more credible taking character voice direction from a former Smurf. Yup.

Also of great value are the insights I get from the fellow students. There is an important point to make here – while Toni can bring everyone together, (barring some sort of crazy extreme circumstances – holding a class outside when its -40F, etc.) it’s the students that create the learning environment. They/we do it by our professionalism, our abilities, our willingness to learn, our willingness to support each other and (the big x factor) our personalities. Presently, it’s a joyous mix and Toni is the mixologist.

I sort of feel at the end of a class like it restores my faith in voice acting. It’s not that I’d lost the faith but rather to be around people who understand such a niche area (ever try and talk about voice acting at a cocktail party – blank stares followed by the ever famous “oh, look at the time!”), who have “been there” (are there) and can speak the (albeit somewhat self-fish, poofy and sometimes a bit odd) language that a voice actor needs to hear to get an evocative performance (whether its a :10 second commercial or an hours long audio book) is very helpful to me.

As always, your mileage may vary.

Ultimately, wherever your place in the world, I hope this post incites you to seek out training, to find the individual or group instruction that helps make you a better, stronger performer in your art. Today I have mine and I am grateful for everything it gives me.

welcome mark driscoll to the blogroll

Radio Imaging & Promo Master Mark Driscoll

For as long as I’ve known Mark Driscoll’s imaging work (which I think goes back to when he was doing imaging for WLZR in the mid ’80’s) I’ve always thought he was at the top of the radio imaging and promo food chain. For me, his voice quality has been right up there with my voice over hero Ernie Anderson LISTEN

And I’ve never and likely will never come close to sounding like either of them.

But I noticed on Facebook for the first time a link to his blog and if radio imaging is a current or future objective of yours, pay attention to what Mark Driscoll tells you.

welcome allison smith to the blog roll

Female Voice Talent Allison Smith

From out of Calgary, Alberta, Canada comes Allison Smith and her Voiceover Gal blog.

Specializing in voicing IVR and telephony platforms, Allison has done that work companies like Verizon, Qwest, Cingular, Bell Canada and Vonage.

Unless I missed it (and I am getting older) I didn’t see an RSS feed but the content I saw looked great.

UPDATE: The RSS Feed address, Allison has advised me, is: http://voicegal.wordpress.com/feed/

cheerleader or backstabber?

My voice over friend Stefania had a blog post that started my wheel house spinning. It was about relationships and how we should treat people.

It begged the question in my head: wouldn’t you really love to know what’s going on inside your client or prospect’s head sometimes?

Wouldn’t that be really helpful when negotiating your fee, for example?

Selfishly, I think we’d all (client and vendor) like that ability sometimes but just for a second, I’d like imagine we COULD know what a client is thinking – specifically about us as service providers. How would we feel about their honest, internal answers that in reality we’ll never know?

Do they think of us as competent or merely convenient?

Are we considered creative or average?

Honest or questionable?

When our transaction is done, will the client be our cheerleader or a backstabber?

The truth and the challenge is, since we cannot know, we can only focus on how we comport ourselves in both word and deed…and how we manage (as Stefania pointed out) relationships.

Or expectations.

Oooo, there’s the question! What do clients expect from us?

Well, great service, great job great value, duh!

But I think more than that, they want attention as part of their contract which I think also means/implies (maybe more importantly) respect.

We are probably polite to clients but are we respectful? Not subservient. Outwardly, buoyantly respectful of their time, talent and treasure.

I think we mostly are but I think we don’t truly think about being respectful, act on it, speak of it. We fall back to….politeness.

I guess I posted this mostly as a reminder to myself. A reminder of the code of conduct I wrote for this company in 2008. A reminder that when all is said and done, people would rather do business with friends and that friendship for me has always been built on mutual respect.

Am I talking crazy?

welcome john melley to the blogroll

In my YouTube searches recently, I came across some great videos on radio studios from John Melley because, well, he works in radio and his station just moved into new facilities.

It seems this is a blog you have to sign up for rather than get an RSS feed delivered directly to your reader but its good stuff so check it out.

UPDATE: John HAS now added an RSS button on his blog so you can get it delivered right to your reader. Thanks John.

welcome andy boyns to the blog roll

With thanks to my friend Ralph Hass for the tip, Andy Boyns has been added to the blog roll.

I believe Andy was at VOICE 2010 and we didn’t get a chance to hang out and I’m sorry for that.

But at least you can read all his cool stuff like I now will.