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  • randyekaye 4:46 pm on March 15, 2011 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment
    Tags: faffcon, voice acting, , ,

    Increasingly, my voiceover work is done from home – and so many others in this business (and others, I know) are finding the same trend affecting them. Very cool to send files to India (what’s the time difference again?), but also so nice to work in my own back yard – which in this case includes Connecticut, New York and parts

    Faffcon attendees twice so far!
    of Massachusetts. Real human beings – woo hoo!

    That’s only one of the reasons I am a devoted faffcon junkie. Having attended two out of two so far, and planning to be there at the upcoming Faffcon in September, I know how it recharges my batteries in so many areas: continued learning

    We are learning to breathe, not out cold!
    about our craft, great business sparks, and – most of all – feeling like a part of the VO community. Online is great but it’s hard to hear the laughter. LOL is nice, but truly laughing so much your stomach hurts – in a good way? Well, you know…priceless.

    In person connection – never underestimate.

     
  • randyekaye 3:28 am on February 4, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment
    Tags: , , , , , Voiceover (2)

    For Lifelong Clients, Apply Lifelong
    Learning … About VO & Everything!

    By Randye Kaye
    Voice Actor and Coach

    Okay, so you’ve already graduated from high school, college, whatever.

    But education is a lifelong pursuit, and in the field of voice-over, everything you learn comes in handy.

    And it’s not just about the specific basics your VO training has drummed into you: acting, diction, body language, pitch, tone, volume and tempo, etc.

    Since over 90% of VO work is in the field of narrations, and since we all want our clients to hire us again, here are 10 things I have found helpful in my 20 years as a VO talent – with many valued clients who have continued to use my voice for new projects.

    1. BASIC ENGLISH SKILLS

    What? Grammar / Vocabulary / Reading Comprehension.

    Why? Let’s face it, you are reading copy – and the more you understand, the more your listener will understand.

    Sometimes you may clarify the copywriter’s intent by catching grammar inconsistencies. Likewise, the better your vocabulary, the fewer stumbling blocks you’ll have to understanding what you’re saying and thereby communicating it (and saying it correctly).

    How? When you read, look up the words you don’t know. Help a 5th grader with homework.

    Practice reading out loud (fiction, non-fiction), and then look away from the page and see if you understand what you just read.

    2. PHONETICS

    What? The science or study of speech, the symbols that represent the sounds.

    Why? Helpful for marking correct pronunciations (medical terms, foreign words) in the margins of your copy (doesn’t have to be standard linguistic symbols, just something you will understand!).

    How? Study a dictionary, and see which symbols (e.g. a line over a vowel represents the “long” pronunciation – like the “a” in BAY; a curved line is the “short” version, like the “a” in BAT) work for you.

    3. FOREIGN LANGUAGES

    What? Anything that is not your native language!

    Why? You’d be amazed how many phrases pop up that have their origins in other languages – plus, you get used to creating sounds that don’t occur in your native language. This has come in very handy for me when narrating audiobooks, or scripts about classical music.

    How? Continuing Education classes, courses on CD or online.

    that’s three! read more at http://bit.ly/Randye

     
  • randyekaye 3:24 am on February 4, 2010 | 1 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment

    Great VO talents are lifelong learners! Read more about it VoiceOverXtra article at http://bit.ly/Randye . feel free to tweet about it, forward the link. thanks!

     
  • randyekaye 3:23 am on February 4, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment
    Tags: , , , , ,

    always wondered about going into Voice Overs? Where to begin? check this out (hit play, it’s me) https://www.edgestudio.com/new_to_voice_...

    Edge Studio offers guidance in finding voice-over potential. http://www.edgestudio.com

     
  • Not by Voice Alone

    randyekaye 1:23 am on March 3, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment
    Tags: , ,

     

    Randye Kaye Voice Over

    Randye Kaye Voice Over

    As a coach with Edge studios in NYC and CT, and as a voice over professional for over 20 years (I was pregnant, wanted to keep acting!),  I find a lot of “newbies” not only freeze their bodies in the booth before they learn to relax, focus, and have fun – but their faces as well.  Try recording yourself at home with no facial expression, then with a smile, but don’t stop there.  What if you raise your eyebrows? Widen your eyes? Look puzzled? Scrunch up your nose?  Tighten your mouth and seethe with anger?  If the camera knows what you’re thinking (and it does), then the microphone knows what your are doing- and feeling.  Have fun!

     

    Randye Kaye

     http://www.randyekaye.com

     
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