Audio Feature Discussion
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http://poetsgraves.co.uk/forum/viewtopi ... 2264#12264
Hear PG poets reading their own featured work! More coming soon.
Hear PG poets reading their own featured work! More coming soon.
Last edited by cameron on Sat Jun 10, 2006 10:08 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Pseud sounds like he's under the sheets with a flashlight telling ghost stories.
As always, I envy the Brits and Aussies their cool accents. Americans have to write twice as well to sound half as profound.
As always, I envy the Brits and Aussies their cool accents. Americans have to write twice as well to sound half as profound.
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Gidday
Just found this section. Cool!
How nice it is to hear the voices of the authors, (even those yanks). We probably all hate our spoken voice, I know my maths students hate mine. Stop cringing about what you sound like.
The quality of some of them is a bit sus. I had to turn everything up on my sound system to hear them.
What about a section that shows people how to record their poems to eliminate the pops and snuffles, record at a decent level, and sound as though they are reading to an audience. (Sounds like criticism, doesn't it?)
Seriously, this is a good part of the site.
Dave
Just found this section. Cool!
How nice it is to hear the voices of the authors, (even those yanks). We probably all hate our spoken voice, I know my maths students hate mine. Stop cringing about what you sound like.
The quality of some of them is a bit sus. I had to turn everything up on my sound system to hear them.
What about a section that shows people how to record their poems to eliminate the pops and snuffles, record at a decent level, and sound as though they are reading to an audience. (Sounds like criticism, doesn't it?)
Seriously, this is a good part of the site.
Dave
Thanks Dave.
The sound is a bit iffy on some poems. The trouble is that everyone records their own, using different equipment (microphones, sound cards etc) which gives vastly differing results. I can only adjust the completed files a small amount. If you have any tips please feel free to post them, it's all a learning process.
I have been promised improved recordings by some people but they are yet to appear (hint, hint).
Glad you liked them anyway.
Cheers
Nicola
The sound is a bit iffy on some poems. The trouble is that everyone records their own, using different equipment (microphones, sound cards etc) which gives vastly differing results. I can only adjust the completed files a small amount. If you have any tips please feel free to post them, it's all a learning process.
I have been promised improved recordings by some people but they are yet to appear (hint, hint).
Glad you liked them anyway.
Cheers
Nicola
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- Location: Brisbane, Australia
My God!
What is that sweet smell drifting across the Pacific? I don't have a problem with any Yank accents. I was just trying to reassure Absolon's Sword who wrote
As always, I envy the Brits and Aussies their cool accents. Americans have to write twice as well to sound half as profound.
Now you want to fart in my general direction! I get no thanks for trying to be nice!
Seriously, there are some very low tech things you could be doing. To get rid of popping sounds from b-words & p-words etc., get some nylons/pantyhose, and after you have tried them on and paraded in front of the mirror a few times, take them off your head, stretch them over wire coat hanger (eqivalent) and fix them between your mouth and the microphone. Or you could pay good money for a commercially produced pop-guard (but that would be stupid, wouldn't it?)
Talking into a microphone scares some people. Get pretty close to it and imagine that you are talking to someone on the other side of the room. Time to get that imaginary friend out of the closet and be bold. People who sing to themselves always think they sound loud as it echoes around their sinuses. Don't be scared to look and feel stupid. You will notice the difference.
When recording, most programmes/recorders have a red zone which flashes up when the incoming sound is too loud. If you record in this area, it will distort on playback. So practice reading as loud as you can and keep nudging the recording volume down until you are just below this level. Of course your neighbours and family will think you are mad, repeating the same thing over and over. Hell, a couple of drinks and I do that in autopilot. And anyway, they knew you were mad in the first place.
So stop trying to record with your head under the blankets, reciting in torch-light. Be brave, take those stockings off and go for it.
Next week I will check and see what has improved and if nothing is going on, I shall repeat these instuctions in sonnet form - and no-one would like to see that, would they?
Cheers
Dave
What is that sweet smell drifting across the Pacific? I don't have a problem with any Yank accents. I was just trying to reassure Absolon's Sword who wrote
As always, I envy the Brits and Aussies their cool accents. Americans have to write twice as well to sound half as profound.
Now you want to fart in my general direction! I get no thanks for trying to be nice!
Seriously, there are some very low tech things you could be doing. To get rid of popping sounds from b-words & p-words etc., get some nylons/pantyhose, and after you have tried them on and paraded in front of the mirror a few times, take them off your head, stretch them over wire coat hanger (eqivalent) and fix them between your mouth and the microphone. Or you could pay good money for a commercially produced pop-guard (but that would be stupid, wouldn't it?)
Talking into a microphone scares some people. Get pretty close to it and imagine that you are talking to someone on the other side of the room. Time to get that imaginary friend out of the closet and be bold. People who sing to themselves always think they sound loud as it echoes around their sinuses. Don't be scared to look and feel stupid. You will notice the difference.
When recording, most programmes/recorders have a red zone which flashes up when the incoming sound is too loud. If you record in this area, it will distort on playback. So practice reading as loud as you can and keep nudging the recording volume down until you are just below this level. Of course your neighbours and family will think you are mad, repeating the same thing over and over. Hell, a couple of drinks and I do that in autopilot. And anyway, they knew you were mad in the first place.
So stop trying to record with your head under the blankets, reciting in torch-light. Be brave, take those stockings off and go for it.
Next week I will check and see what has improved and if nothing is going on, I shall repeat these instuctions in sonnet form - and no-one would like to see that, would they?
Cheers
Dave
I have upgraded the audio player and included a dial-up version which hopefully will play better for those without broadband. The sound quality has been improved and should be a bit clearer. There is also an arrow next to each poem which enables you to save it to your computer and listen again at your leisure.
This is an ongoing project and we have decided to include poems which may not have been featured but have been well received in the experienced section. If anyone is interested in doing a recording please contact us.
Thanks to kozmik for his help and 'Handy Tips' (I have included his rendition of 'Dance').
This is an ongoing project and we have decided to include poems which may not have been featured but have been well received in the experienced section. If anyone is interested in doing a recording please contact us.
Thanks to kozmik for his help and 'Handy Tips' (I have included his rendition of 'Dance').