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| Jack Nicholson |
Sounds like a way for SAG-AFTRA to dabble in audiobooks, which they have been fairly inconspicuous with in the past. | |||
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| Newbie |
I too am looking to get into voice over work, and am especially interested in learning more about audio books. I am non-union. I am looking into Kalmenson in Burbank, but would rather stay in OC if possible. I only see one school in O.C., Del Mar Media Arts, but not sure how current they are on the latest trends in VO. With a sm baby at home I was hoping to stay in O.C. area to train. Yet, if I have to go to L.A. to train at a reputable school that will look good on a resume, I will do it. If I can't stay in O.C., can you pls reccomend some reputable options in L.A./So L.A.? Thanks! | |||
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| Marlon Brando |
If you're in OC, Beverly Bremmers might be great | |||
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| Johnny Depp |
David Lawrence has Anne Ganguzza teaching his class in Irvine. Anne started the VO Peeps group in Orange County. Info about David's classes(taught by Anne) on his site: http://www.vo2gogo.com/ | |||
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| Russell Crowe |
I just wanted to revisit this thread real quick. I've been using the iaudition app(at my agents suggestion) for the better part of a year now. No bookings, but, more to the point, no feedback/direction from my agency about the MP3's themselves. I've had hundreds of auditions,with no feedback except for one time where I forgot to slate. Other than that, nothing. What I realized, belatedly, is that they weren't really listening to them. They would send them out as is, or, maybe, not send and just not say anything if it wasnt up to standard.This particular agency had a makeshift booth at the office with the agents doing the recording. When I wanted to come in to record, they almost always asked for the MP3 instead because it saved them time. Now, the app is solid, but it's it no way ideal. Nothing beats a good mic and proper editing software. I asked them, again and again if my reads were good and they always assured me they were. I'm good at this; They were probably right, but, as someone who used to be at a much larger agency(where they have constant feedback to clients on MP3'd auditions and had proper booth directors) I now think these guys were just playing me off. My point is, what I wrote earlier in the thread was wrong. Only use apps like iaudition as a last resort. Some have booked with it, true; but you'll see much better results with a good setup. I dropped that agent. | |||
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| Newbie |
Awesome. Thank you! | |||
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| Newbie |
From what I understand, a demo should be about a minute long (but no longer). I've also heard recommendations to not read already produced commercials, but then what kind of copy can I use? I guess I'm just not entirely sure on the details of how to make up a demo for VO. | |||
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| Denzel Washington |
You can read already produced commercials - no one will know the difference. Besides, your production will have different music/effects than the actual commercial. I transcribed some commercials I liked and tweaked the copy a little bit. I also took ads out of magazines and re-wrote the copy to be more VO focused. Choose products, sites or services that are right for your type. ie. If you're a 20 year old female, a make-up spot would be more appropriate for your demo than a Viagara commercial. Choose copy for the jobs you could be booking. You can go on Voicebank and listen to a ton of other people's demos. Before you book your time and pay your producer to make yours, listen to a lot of them to see what you like and what you don't like. And yes, industry standard 1 minute - no longer. Also, don't mix heavy character work (impersonations, character voices like for animation) with commercial demos. It's ok to show your range for commercial, but don't go too far. | |||
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| Jack Nicholson |
The commercial demo should be YOU, nothing else. Stevesteve's advice about recording is atrocious for actual projects. Casting people listen for a few things: Sound quality, read quality, processing, etc. The higher prestige of a project; the more prickly they'll be about details. Would you walk into an on-camera audition without looking your best? No make-up, ragged clothing, smelling like a dumpster; that kind of thing? The same principle applies to auditioning for proper VO-projects. When it comes to the AT2020: I have yet to hear anything beside, "passing to bad," from actual working VOs. | |||
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| Al Pacino |
I'm noticing these days, they want you to have your own equipment for a lot of projects. | |||
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| Jack Nicholson |
And that equipment, along with your recording environment, should be able to muster broadcast-quality audio. | |||
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How to get involved in voice over work
