SHORT FILM - "I Am Not Well" (PAID)

TheVoicz for Daemon

Voice Actor
Voice Actor
Daemon
closed
Unpaid
Role assigned to: noahhakvern

(DEEP VOICE - Ex: Supreme Leader Snoke)

  • Bastian.... Did you really think I could be rid of so easily?

  • The only reason I'm here, is because of you...

  • Bastian.... Put the pills down.

TheVoicz
SHORT FILM - "I Am Not Well" (PAID)
VizorFox
VizorFox

Legit got goosebumps while listening to this.

Poppletron
Poppletron

Sounds good, but it's only mixed into the left channel and you should really record in mono.

    TheVoicz
    TheVoicz

    Um. That's why it is "mixed" into one channel because it's was recorded in mono.

      Poppletron
      Poppletron

      I'm not sure that's how it should work, it should send the same signal to both sides if it's actually mono. IDK I'm no expert.

        TheVoicz
        TheVoicz

        And this is why you don't know. : ) Also if you looked it up for future information, having an XLR box (e.x. Focusrite) submits it to one channel. 90% or more professionals record like this.

          Poppletron
          Poppletron

          Huh, interesting. Learn something every day I guess.

          Simon D. Aelsi

          [deleted]

            TheVoicz
            TheVoicz

            If you know what the terminology "salty" is, you wouldn't be using it to describe my simple responses. If anything I just told him something that most wouldn't know. So would you rather me not respond? Imagine what we would learn if we didn't. But that's your interpretation of my responses. Soooo.... :)

            TheVoicz
            TheVoicz

            P.S. If you're recording in "mono" and it's playing through both sides... it's not really mono then is it? : )

              dandhii
              dandhii

              The truth of the matter is... If you record in mono it does play through both sides, Mono just means One. Mono-directional, Monographic, etc. A mono recording plays One sound through both speakers. A stereo recording recorded on one side will only play that sound on one side. and you do seem to be responding quite 'defensively' to the comments. I'm reading through the comments, and even with different inflections on different words... they come across nearly if not completely rude and to use the term previously mentioned... "salty" Calm down bro, they're just trying to help.

                dandhii
                dandhii

                P.S. Your performance is Amazing

                TheVoicz
                TheVoicz

                I know how it generally works. I've been coached by individuals alone over 20 years/30 years of experience. They helped me set up what I currently have. There's no benefit to begin with recording stereo. Wasn't being defensive on anything either, this is clearly made a big deal because emotions are not expressed based on writing or typing, you are more than welcome to contact me in a discussion to see how I really "feel" with this topic. (Which isn't anything because nothing were behind the words). Again, this is your interpretation of what I'm saying. If anything, I gave him knowledge as he didn't know. I appreciate all feedback even when it's dog piling the pessimistic. I personally take direction extremely well. P.S. I wasn't completely trying in the auditions as this is considered fun for me, and a career choice.

                  EmmaGrewar
                  EmmaGrewar

                  What they're trying to say is your audio only comes out of the left ear, when technically it should come out of both ears! No ones trying to insult you or tell you what to do :)

                  AliMackScot
                  AliMackScot

                  You are recording a Mono Input into a Stereo Track, which gives the one sided recording. If you are comfortable working like that and you feel it brings your ability across for auditions, then thats absolutely fine pal, its your choice how you record, unless specified by the job poster.

      Michael Altamirano

      Hi, im here to provide a solution to this as I find it is quite the common issue many voice actors come across, recording in mono does not leave the voice coming into only the left ear channel of headphones or speakers. In fact you can record mono and still have both sides provide sound. In order to fix this(Assuming you're on windows 10), click on the bottom left area where it says "type here to search", type "Manage audio devices" and click the matching result, at the top of the new resulting window, switch to the recording tab, click on the device you are using to record or the audio interface it is connected to; Proceed to click Properties, From the advanced tab drop down menu, change it into a 1 channel. This will fix the issue for you.

        TheVoicz
        TheVoicz

        Since nobody has listened or read my replies: "1 channel, 16 bit, 44.1k (CD Quality)" "1 channel, 16 bit, 48.0k (DVD Quality)" Like I mentioned above, working as intended. We let the client/audio engineers deal with the mixing, unless specified. : )

JamesL
JamesL

I've been an audio technician for 25 years and a voice actor for almost 10. It doesn't matter if you have 1 speaker or 10, a mono audio signal should come out evenly on every one of them.

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