Chris Nicholl - the Imaging King!

Back in September, I spoke to an old colleague from New Zealand radio, and a New Zealand Broadcasting School fellow graduate!
Chris Nicholl is the owner and founder of Wizz FX, a specialist radio imaging, audio branding company working with some of the biggest broadcasters and brands in the world - the BBC, Capital FM, KISS FM, stations right across Europe and America.

We discussed what radio imaging is, why it is important, the process of translating a brand into a sound, how and why a particular voice is selected or cast for an imaging project, what is involved in being the voice of a station, how to charge for being the voice of a station or broadcaster, how some voice over artists sound better compressed than others.

We also do a 'demo session' and Chris gives the feedback he'd usually give to talent in the booth. More info: www.wizzfx.com

Here is the transcript:

Toby Ricketts

Welcome to gravy for the brain, Oceania and VO life. It's the interview series which goes behind the scenes of the voiceover industry and associated craft and find out a little bit more and get a chance to geek out a little bit in the world of voice. And joining me today is a total nerd of audio. A kindred spirit of mine. It's Chris Nicholl from Wizz FX. Welcome, Chris.

Chris Nicholl

Hello, thank you for having me.

Toby Ricketts

That's quite right. You're a kiwi expat. You're living in London actually - not London anymore. You were in London, right? I was. Yeah. And now

Chris Nicholl

I'm in the southwest of England. A Shire called Devonshire.

Toby Ricketts

Love it. I feel like we are at the cusp of doing a series of like, of Kiwis doing good things in audio overseas. So you're the first There you go. Welcome.

Chris Nicholl

Oh, cool. Yeah, I'll bet that you can get a you know, I'm probably the lowest point to start I'm

Toby Ricketts

gonna give us have somewhere to go. Now we know each other from the hallowed halls of the New Zealand broadcasting school. And that's where I think you kind of got into imaging kind of early. You've got a company called whiz effects, which is like the one like one of the best imaging country companies in the world. You service like clients all over the world, don't you?

Chris Nicholl

Yes, that's right. Yeah. So we have originally started with clients in New Zealand being an expat and has grown into we've worked with stations and faraway places as Iceland. But now yes, a lot of American stations, quite a few European stations, quite a few British stations, English stations, BBC and stuff like that. So yeah, we're, we're, we're in amongst it with some of the very big companies say we're quite a small company, but hopefully punching above our weight.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, absolutely. Definitely. Definitely. So imaging, what is it? Because most people won't really send without imaging. What do you mean? Is that something to do with cameras?

Chris Nicholl

Yeah, well, I mean, this is the age old issue. I think, with all people who work in imaging, I still can't really explain this to my mum. And I've only been doing it for 20 odd years. So yeah, I mean, imaging is like the bits, I think, on a radio station that create the brand. And I think the word imaging is the it's it's not the right term, really, that's kind of what it's has been used. Because when you watch a TV station, and you see the little identifiers in between, either between ads, or maybe even just at the end of an ad break before the next TV show starts, whatever it'll have the logo won't and it'll say a little bit about what's coming up. Or maybe it's a competition or it's promoting another show. So those kinds of elements, but in a in a radio sense, obviously with just audio. And and some I think I, I think a lot of people that do radio imaging prefer internally to call it audio branding, because really, that's what it is. But yes, certainly I know that the the traditional name is what has stuck. But it's yes, just Sonic identities. I'm using all these other words to describe it that it probably also need to be unpacked. But But yeah, it's It's the voice of the station.

Toby Ricketts

Everything that's not like music, ads, or talking. But what kind of imaging basically, doesn't it? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Excellent.

Chris Nicholl

And collectively, I think on a lot of radio stations, rightly or wrongly, I, you know, there's not, let's not unpack that. Let's not get into that debate. But rightly or wrongly, it's often the thing that takes other than music, it's the thing that takes up the most amount of time on the station and commercials, has commercials. You know, you're looking at this as the radio imaging is the thing that talks to the listener the most. And so, it's incredibly important.

Toby Ricketts

And, like, Why do stations use it? If it's incredibly important, like, do you know? Sure? Yeah. Like, what, why? Why did they go down that route? And not just have the DJs and the music?

Chris Nicholl

Yeah, I think that some of that is a great question. I think there are opportunities for the presenter to say certain things. But it's also an opportunity to do and say things that you might not want your presenter to say. That could be a commercial message. Or it could be that you don't want the presenter to spend all their time talking about what's coming up, you know, and what other things are happening on the radio station. So that's where you could use radio imaging, perhaps to serve that function, but also traditional Traditionally, when we all had, and I'm old enough to remember pre digital radios and cars, you had the dial and you would just be going around trying to find you just see that little analog dial We'll move along, you might not necessarily know that you're on 92.7, you, it'll just be on sort of 92. And you don't know how far up or down. And so it was quite important, I think in those days to say the name of the radio station and the frequency that you were on, and perhaps communicate what sort of music you're playing between every song so that people knew what was going on. Now, you know, perhaps it's less needed in the modern era. But a lot of radio stations still use these junctions between songs or before or after commercial breaks, or in the flow of even sometimes in the flow of music or around a presenter talking to get away some key messaging, which will often be station name, and do that in creative ways. Right? It's not just, you know, I'm sure we'll get to this later on. But it's not just the station name, there'll be some, some creativity that goes into that. And musically, or, technically, whatever.

Toby Ricketts

Arguably, I guess it could be more important these days, because it's a much more crowded marketplace than it was back in the day. And so to differentiate yourself,

Chris Nicholl

I think also you're you're up against. And again, I guess this is why I think a lot of people, at least not externally, but internally, you're talking about audio branding, or Sonic branding over radio imaging is sort of a name for it now, because we're not You're not just competing with the radio station. On the other frequency, you're competing with Spotify, you're competing with podcasting, and YouTube and all other forms of media. And because everything's a fragmented, and so niche, I think it's yeah, you're right. It's it's very important to still communicate what it is that you do and who you are. So that people who are listening who might have just dropped in for a moment aren't confused.

Toby Ricketts

And I think, as you said, with podcasting, I think that's going to play and I see it playing more of a big role in professional podcasts, like you'll listen to like Freakonomics Radio, or I don't know, This American Life, and they have their own distinct sounds these days, and like, they have the same musical beats at different points. So it's like, you're kind of in their zone, when you're listening to it, which which differentiates it? You know, it makes you a better customer of that podcast, doesn't it? Yeah. Yeah. And

Chris Nicholl

I think it's an example I think everybody brings up but uh, you imagine, you think that McDonald's jingle that data that now I remember when they rewrote that, and it came out, and it was a full song, and Justin Timberlake sang, you know, had a had a hand in there with the creative agency. But even now, I think that was that was probably about 20 years ago, they just use the whistles or the butter. But but but sometimes just notes, whatever it is, everyone knows that that's McDonald's, right? Yeah. And I guess that shows the power of audio branding. Generally speaking, radio doesn't work in quite the same way. However, there are elements that are the same. And so sometimes you don't need to hear anything other than a sound effect or a voice might not even say, you know, BBC Radio One is a great example, here in the UK, they have a lot of different voices, but you just need to hear them say, one, you don't need to hear anything else to know that. It's BBC Radio One. And I think that, that, you know, this, there's power in that you start to be able to, to get away with less, more or less is more. And that's the real beauty of, of well executed radio imaging. So it certainly follows that same pen. And so it is, as you say, important, because it does bring people into a world. And you're sort of creating clubs, I suppose. And familiarity, and all of those kinds of things that I think are really important. And, and, you know, because you've, you've brought up Freakonomics and you, you know that they do these things in the specific way, and same tones and beats and whatever else and in Insane Places. It's instantly recognizable to you, you recall it. And that's, you know, that's a repeat repetition thing that also plays in in amongst making good stuff. And I think that you're right, that is very important in radio, because you are wanting to create this community with what you're doing. And and there's also there's an air of professionalism to that. I think that I think you know, if it was more haphazard. If only one product is very haphazard, that's fine, you'd understand that that product is a haphazard product, and that's its brand but if anyone else has has it as well, you start to get confused. So I think it's what a lot of people are quite laser focused on a journey and a sound and, and having it have this home in this community.

Toby Ricketts

Cool. Before we go any further, I'll play some of your work so that people can got to listen out for what we're talking about and nasty website by the way I think government you're on that brand new so hearing brand new stuff from from Chris's website with effects.com This is the CHR showreel off the front page

Unknown Speaker

thr DC sound like this

Unknown Speaker

is pretty cool

Chris Nicholl

Charlie xes selects the best song ever. Raising

xes FCX selects the ultimate playlist to soundtrack the big moments in your life. BBC sounds like 99.9 Vegas Chicago

Toby Ricketts

don't say nice combination. You can see the full thing on the front of the station there I'm gonna play a country one as well just show a bit of difference between the two

Unknown Speaker

your station could sound like JMG was number one for new country

Toby Ricketts

had cut out of that one, some great work there. It always sounds like imaging has got its own kind of sound itself in a way like it's it sounds like exciting and Sisley and like it's been compressed to the wazoo. Do you want to talk us through the like this the way it's come to that sound? Like, is there a competition for ear drums, like on the waves and you're trying to win it at all costs?

Chris Nicholl

I think that's definitely a perception. Yes. And I think that that's a you know, there's there's into technical, you know, music and advertising. And in podcasts, and even videos on YouTube and stuff. There's this thing about the loudness war that's been going on for a long time. And there are various measures without delving too far into it that govern what's allowed. Yeah.

Toby Ricketts

If people want to, if people want to, like go down a rabbit hole with that just search like the loudness wars on YouTube. And you'll find so much info about like, how compression has just changed the face of music and radio and lots of different things. But yeah, I digress, and

Chris Nicholl

also a lot about our listening habits and what it does psychologically to people. And and, yeah, so there's certainly a lot of guff on that, and you could lose yourself, as I said, it's a rabbit hole. But I think in radio, there are no rules and regulations yet that govern how loud you can be. And because of that, unfortunately, there can be a tendency to play into well, I need to make things as loud as possible, I need to compete with what's going on. But I think interestingly, yes, the stuff that we played is, is quite compressed. But actually, if you were to pull up the, you know, an alleyway face meter, again, try not to get too technical, it's actually still fairly dynamic in comparison to other things that are happening, right? Yeah. Yes, imaging certainly has this loud sound, and it's meant to sound exciting,

Toby Ricketts

and kind of edgy, it's got like an edge to it. You know,

Chris Nicholl

I was always taught very early on many, many, many moons ago, when we knew each other as young men, that the idea really is to create excitement, and to be bigger and more more edgy, then the brand itself. So you use some of these technical tools, compression and whatnot to make it sound a bit more exciting and sexy, I guess. Yeah. And you want it to leap out of the radio, because if someone has the radio, or you know, it's something that was told to me by an old boss of mine, and when I was in working in New Zealand, Christian Boston, he said to me, if someone's got the radio down quite quietly, you want the imaging to really kind of jump out just that little bit louder. So if you've got something's happening and turn it up, and so I guess I've just applied that mentality. But I think also there's this degree of, you don't want to listen to I mean, by all means, go and dissect and listen to the many minutes of reels that we have on the website, but it's not built to be listened to. In that way. It's meant to serve in between jobs, and

Toby Ricketts

I find it I find it quite fatiguing to listen to like on good monitors or headphones as it as it should, because it's like, it's like mainlining you know, castor sugar, like, it's just too much A little bit I noticed between songs and everything, so I've taken my head off to working with it all day as well, there must be some like silence breaks that needed we just sort of go into a quiet room and just rock backwards and forwards a little bit.

Chris Nicholl

A lot of become the matrix is a lot of I can make this thing without listening to it. Right I've made and now I'll listen to electro Yeah, that's interesting. I know when certain things and then just listen for the end. Yeah.

Toby Ricketts

I mean, I do the same thing with my voice stuff. How I can edit it without looking at it. You know, you get very good visual. Looks like you know, yeah, exactly. Yeah, exactly. I know, I did that take three times I can take them out, etc. So speaking of voice, you need voices in imaging? Generally, there's the voice free imaging, probably not because it needs to communicate some kind of language, doesn't it to get into the listener? Yeah,

Chris Nicholl

I think they just step back to that McDonald's idea. There are stations that do have like a sonic logo, or a jingle package they've had for years, decades, maybe. And so they can get away with just, you know, whatever. Their logo was just played with a few notes. That does exist, but I think a majority of radio stations have followed fashion too much and perhaps have changed too many times to have that in their back pocket. Yeah. So

Toby Ricketts

as the as the the victim of the voice has been cut from voicing a major network, it feels like changing every two or three years.

Chris Nicholl

Yeah. But I think I think you know, it is imperative for most stations. And you know, to go back to that example, I quoted before about BBC with Radio One, they can just say one now and people Narcos Radio One. Cool. That's not to say they don't I mean, they do still say you'll get usually BBC Radio One might be one BBC Radio One or whatever, you get some sort of combination of it. But they can get away with less than they want to. But it still needs a voice. Right? So yeah, you're right. It is important and you do need one or more.

Toby Ricketts

It used to be the day that like you did have like a voice that was the sound of something like I'm thinking of like John Sweetman in New Zealand hears the voice of like classic hits or something for just for like an institution, you just hear His voice and be like, Oh, it's a classic hits guy. Yeah, have you seen a move away from that? Where it is more of a potpourri of of either onstage or offstage voices? And are they changing quite regularly? Or are they still sticking with that kind of consistent sound?

Chris Nicholl

I think it really depends on the brand. And I think that a station like when I was in New Zealand at ZDm, I think we change the voice once or twice and I was there for six, seven years. We had a we had a consistent voice, but we added or removed other voices from that. Similarly, when I was at at Capitol here in the UK, we had one voice guy called Howard Ritchie who just was power, massive power. And he'd been on the station for so long that it's almost like if you take him away, you're taking away the identity of the station. So we would add in other voices around him sort of supporting team and we would change them occasionally. But then you look at a station like radio one or TCM UK, they have there's a multitude of voices going on there. And it's more about those stations, reflecting younger audiences, much younger audiences than perhaps something like capital, although I don't think that those that capital would like to hear that. I think they they would say they're aiming for the same audience. But I think that younger folk don't necessarily care about one person talking at them all the time or talking with them all the time, they got lots of friends. So they used hearing lots of voices. Whereas a station that is more of a classic hits format, or as easy listening format, might have one or two very solid, consistent voices that just are there over time and become a warm friend because that brands music is and that its personality or station ality is an old word that I remember from my broadcasting school days, you know, which is the personality of the radio station is such that you want that. So you keep you know, so a lot of the lot of the choices feed into that wider idea of who is the radio station? And by that, I mean, if you had to boil your radio station or your brand down to one being one person, who is that person, and what do they like? And then you'd reflect that by your choice and voices or voice or what have you.

Toby Ricketts

And I guess Yeah, so the gender and age of the person that's going to be dictated by the the sort of it's going to be appear of the target audience effectively, isn't it? Yeah, correct. Yeah,

Chris Nicholl

I would say that one thing I will say is, you might be you know, like my She probably killed me if she was in the house. And she's not. So I can say, my wife is a voiceover artist and she's in her mid 40s. Yet she's voicing for a station that's much younger. So I think it also comes down to the tone, you know, you might, you might he might be older, you might be young, but you might have a voice that is either before or beyond your years and therefore suits

Toby Ricketts

totally, like a character. Yeah, correct.

Chris Nicholl

Yeah. And I think the beauty of that is, with with bigger scripts in, in radio imaging, I will get on to this. And but it was radio imaging being what it is, sometimes you have one word to say, sometimes you will have 30 words or more to say, and something slightly more long form. But a lot of the personality will come out in the long form stuff. And so you're able to develop their character, as you say, and that spills into other things. And you learn how to say one in a youthful way. Right old way? Yeah, like,

Toby Ricketts

yeah,

Chris Nicholl

I guess that's the neck, isn't it? Ultimately, at the end of the day is learning how to be able to do that. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

yeah, absolutely. So how do what's the usual process for casting voices for imaging? Is it something that you do as the production company or just the station cast, and

Chris Nicholl

it can be a mix of both. We have been contacted by some people we've worked with who have just gone, we're looking for new voices as part of what we're doing, who would you suggest, which is great. The problem can sometimes be that our clients have a traditional way that they've worked in the past for selecting voices. So that can make it difficult because they're expecting to hear the same five people that are always used or whatever. But sometimes, they'll have already cast voices. And so we won't have have a choice, again, tends to fall into the same sort of roster of people that you would usually hear when we have the opportunity to go a little bit more, not off piste. But certainly, we have more control over, you know, what the sound is going to be we've been given slightly more rain will look for voices anywhere in everywhere, I think, think Long gone are the days where you had to be a dedicated specialist at Radio, women. I mean, there is a neck to it. But it's it's coachable. And it is sometimes nice to work with fresh voices who don't necessarily fit the traditional imaging mold. Because you are either able to beat out, catch the mistakes early or the the tropes, the cliche styles of managing voicing early and kind of work, to move a voice away from them, or fresh like I sometimes find. We did. We just did a podcast branding package, actually for a football club, here in the UK. And it was quite good, the client had written a really great a really great script, you know, and then being people in the radio industry as well, you know that they sort of have a good command of how to write a good script, so is excellent to work with. But also they'd selected a voice that was perfect. And it just all came together. It was one of those moments where I don't know if we'd have done a better job of selecting it was just it just sounded so good. And but that voice I had never worked with never heard of before. And it's so refreshing. And I'm not so sure that this person had done a lot of traditional radio imaging before too. But it's, we didn't direct the session, unfortunately. But they delivered some really excellent stuff that was just a little bit more. Not informal, but it wasn't. It wasn't stagnant. It wasn't cliche, it just it just, it just had this lovely sort of natural feel to it. And it worked brilliantly. And I don't know the voiceover style was meant to be very over the top English movie trailer voiceover. So even when you you're taking the mickey out of that sort of voiceover style. I mean, you you instantly fall into a pattern that works. But it was just really fresh and nice. And I think there is a certainly a desire from us as a company. And I know from some of the other companies in our space to work with fresh talent and not work with the same four or five people. So I think we I have put out casting calls before. And unfortunately, we've not been able to go as far as we'd like on those casting calls. But you find some really excellent people when you're doing that. And hopefully you ever worked with them on another job that comes forward. But yeah, I think I think regardless of someone's experience, I think there are people out there that are looking for new You voices that are not the same. And the problem is once you get yourself an imaging gig and you become established, everyone wants you, which is great for the person that's got that gig. But it can be difficult for other people to find a lay again and get started and doing some stuff.

Toby Ricketts

Exactly, yeah, I imagined you would have seen like some trend in the industry towards sort of inclusivity and diversity, as well, because that's been definitely a trend, you know, in the American market, especially in other markets for advertising. Yeah. And also like a lean towards that more, like you said, the more kind of relaxed style like not sound like most of the casting calls come through today saying don't sound like a traditional voiceover. We don't want like an announcer read. It's got a you know, sound casual and, and conversational, etc. And would you say that applies to imaging?

Chris Nicholl

I do think that yes, I think people don't speak in the way that sometimes the audio we hear, especially in radio imaging, even some of the stuff that we're making, now, which I think is quite modern and fresh, people don't necessarily speak in that way. But I think it definitely there is a big angle and push towards being more natural speaking, even more like the audience. If you go back to the 50s, in New Zealand, for example. And the voices were almost British listen to these archival broadcasts. But that's not how we sound, we hear this. Depending on on on who you're talking to a lovely or horrible accent. That's what we should be hearing, right? We should be hearing our own voices on in media. And I think it was one thing I will say about the UK, which I really love is I can turn on any radio station, and I will hear a plethora of accents, you know, from all across the country, all within one commercial break or on one radio stations piece of imaging. And that's great. And definitely, as you say, inclusive inclusivity is, is has increased massively, you hear or hear all sorts of different tones and styles. And that's great. And as it should be. Because that's what life is like when I walk out my door, I'm going to talk to people just like that. So, you know, I think it makes radio more friendly. But also just generally media and brands more friendly. Because they are all like real people.

Toby Ricketts

And totally. So say someone gets this gig. Oh, and I was gonna also say, Is it important that people have like an imaging demo? Or would you discuss them from like a commercial or just from the rent this the reels on their site?

Chris Nicholl

I would, I'd be happy to cast irrespective of hearing imaging, because I have an imagination, I can hear someone's voice and go call this person, regardless of whether there's coaching involved. You know, for example, we many, what, three years ago, when we were launching our construct product, which is like a production service thing for radio stations, we were looking for a voice for our hip hop, brand or format. And I just all of the hip hop voices that I were hearing were big, sort of traditional American voices that didn't sound like their audience, they didn't sound particularly fun and friendly. Albeit we wanting a voice with a bit of attitude. Because you know, hip hop can be certainly quite an aggressive musical format at times. But we ended up finding a guy in South Dakota of all places, who was a friend of one of the guys that that I work with, who's he's a hip hop musician. That's what he does. He's a rapper. And we're just like called, can you read some stuff, let's have a listen to it. And it was, his tone was great. We had to do a little bit of coaching and working to kind of get it, like perfect and how we wanted it. But he just had this he had a sound his voice that we just couldn't find anywhere else that we got excited about. And I think that, you know, I definitely will listen to demos, irrespective of imaging being in there. And just is there a call tone here? Can I hear that this would work? Do I have a feeling about it? And I think that that's how a lot of casting works generally, anyway. Yes. They're looking for a specific thing. But if they have three voices that sound like that specific, whatever the specific sound there after they have three voices that meet the criteria, they're going to go on a feeling. I feel like this one's better or whatever. It is an unhelpful to have an imaging demo though because I think there are plenty of people in this industry that unfortunately don't have imaginations and they want someone they know has already done it before. So it makes their life a lot easier to just go here's the script reader done. Unfortunately, and and and I know there are people out there that will do imaging demos for people. We have done it before for a few voices. But I'm sort of I'm not sure I, that's the right way to go about it. I know we enter into a chicken and egg scenario where you want an imaging demo, but you don't want ever fake one.

Toby Ricketts

How do you get the work to get the work? Yeah,

Chris Nicholl

it's tough. Yeah, it is tough. But I think that's it comes down to relationship building, like anything doesn't. I can think of a few people I've worked with in the past, who haven't done imaging before, but we've just been chatting, and then suddenly, our Do you know what I've got? I mean, there'll be perfect for your voice, let's do it, and then leads to another thing. And another thing, and you know, a couple years down the road, they've done quite a lot of stuff. And bam, there's an imaging demo. Yeah, yeah. It's a long game. And I think, yeah, it is a long game. Yeah. So But equally, I know of people that have just gone out and got an imaging demo made and have walked straight into work. So it's, it's a really tough one. I hate to advise people either way. Because if but my personal feeling is, again, feeling is that I don't need to hear an imaging demo to know if it's a voice that I want to work with.

Toby Ricketts

So say people get their gig, what kind of things happen, what should people expect in a session, because I'm always surprised when I've done a few, like, especially when you're imaging something from the ground up, there's a lot of stuff to record, because your recording every permutations, pages and pages, and not just that, but like many versions of the same word, you the station, you know, you've got to, you've got to find a lot of new ways and different ways to say things in case they need it. So, you know, talk us through what goes on in an imaging session.

Chris Nicholl

Sure, yeah. So you'll have, you know, assuming you've got pages of stuff that's going to be long, you know, could be an hour or more of saying, very few words, but lots of times. And it's very much all bullet point, in my mind is when you know, when when I'm writing a script of imaging stuff, there are specific phrases and sayings that need to be said. And they're, they're constructed in specific ways. So for example, you'll have the station name, I don't know, let's say the stations called Yellow, I'm looking at yellow behind me. So you know, yellow, so you're gonna have to say, yellow five or six times, and even then you might not have said it, right. And you just got to keep saying it until the producers like, yeah, that's, there's a good one there, say it more like, you know, draw the O out of that yellow, or shorten that up yellow, whatever it might be. And there'll be that coaching and direction. And the tape will just roll the whole way through, you know, the amount of times I've done sessions where I've had someone say the station name 50 times, and ended up picking the first one. But you've, you've had to sort of work through a journey to discover what's possible with the voice as well, because it's an instrument really. But then, you know, from there, once you've said the station name, once, then you know, you've got, you've got that one in the bag, you've done, your 50 takes and there's one in there, that's perfect. You might then have to say versus yellow. It's through that process again, on yellow. And once you've kind of got the permutations of yellow, said, then you're looking at with, with her with Toby with Chris with lights with whatever it is. So then you've got to think about okay, so now I'm saying new words, but they need to work with old words that I've already said. So yellow, with Toby, so you have to think okay, with Toby, how many different ways can I say that, but when it's clipped out of that session, and put after the station name, will it work, because you're effectively creating building blocks, as opposed to saying it out loud, you know, the whole way through every time. And actually, you know, in reality, you know, those 50 yellows, maybe there's 50 versus yellow and 50 on yellows, maybe two or three are selected, and we'll be I tend to cut out of sessions, my favorite bits and save them separately in a sort of a database. And then I'm able to construct what I want to say with their voice, rather than having to get their voice in every five minutes to say specific phrases. Yeah. And so it becomes a almost like a toolkit database voice to use. But I will say that I have been in every job I've had, even though I might have the perfect take of yellow with Toby. If I've got a script that has something that comes after the with Toby like, on Saturday nights at seven. I'll still get the voice to say yellow with Toby on Saturday nights. from seven, and if they do a great tape, I'll use that tape. But if not, then I know I can go back and cut my favorite bits in and create the perfect read. And I think that that is the reason that the industry is gone. It sits in that way. And the reason imaging works in that way is because radio is an extremely last minute medium. So, you know, I'm going to probably find out today that on Friday, a client needed something, the client, it's not because we didn't deliver it, it's because the clients gone. Shit, I haven't requested that thing I needed on Friday, and I needed it yesterday, can I have it now. And we're not going to have time to contact the voice, get them to record, we're going to just have to make it. So I think that there's that sort of sense of immediacy and radio, that we can turn things around quickly. That means that, you know, the sort of industry has gone to that way where you create almost a database. And and I would say on that, I don't know if we if if we want to go too far into this. But I would say on that what you would tend to do with imaging is either do a buyout for a slightly higher rate, or you would do a license, your license your voice for a period of time, right, depending on the market and the size of the station, and etc, etc. Because if it's a small internet station, good luck. Yeah, say, if it's like a larger station that's broadcasting to millions of people, you'll be able to get a license, certainly.

Toby Ricketts

And how do they differ? So a license is basically a yearly fee, as long as my voice is the voice of your station in any way, then while you're paying me you must pay X Yeah, yeah. And then

Chris Nicholl

that could be, it may be that the agreement is something like and we have a few like this, where it's like, there's a fee monthly fee, you can have a page read every month, if you want. But if not, doesn't matter, use it or lose it. But if at the end of 12 months, you don't want to renew, you have to take my voice off the radio station. So there there are scenarios like that. But equally as my wife was trying to get into it. And I know lots of voices do that there's been smaller little stations or one off jobs, where it's a there's just a fee for this thing. And it will, you know, will cost you whatever the price is for this page. And that will be

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, yeah.

I mean, then that's kind of fair enough. If it's an it like you're saying internet station with like, 500 monthly users like it's it's such small fry that it's like, you know, it's not there's no economic model. That works. Yeah, you were going back to saying about like, you know, making stuff out of work parts. Ai voice is a recent addition to, you know, the world. Have you heard of, I mean, have you heard of any production departments or anything using those tools to sort of get things they otherwise, you know, they need the voice to voice them? They're not available? So let's just make it with this AI model. We've,

Chris Nicholl

I've not, and we haven't done it? I think there are there are two problems there. The first problem is, will the quality be right? And and the second problem, which is arguably more important is what's the legality around that, like, you know, I can record a session with you. We forget a word happens. Can I just Yeah, totally. Can I just I'll just upload the session and model it and I'll say it myself, and then it's done. But I think I mean, that's poor form of people are doing that, because I think most voices will go No problem. I'll just say that one thing, it's not a big deal. If it's lots of stuff, yeah, you know, pay for the session. Sorry, you forgot a bunch of stuff. But I sort of also Yeah, I think it's it's such a, or it's a tricky place to be. You know, my opinion on AI is that, you know, scary for a lot of people, us included, you know, we could all find that we are out of work. However, I think the people that know how to leverage and use the technology in a smart and creative way will be successful. So we do use a lot of AI tools, but we don't use AI tools for replacing the performances of real people

Toby Ricketts

and use it for creating new effects. And yeah, correct.

Chris Nicholl

And one thing I will say the one thing we have done with it is we had a job come in for a station and needed it to sound like a 90s house record with a preacher. And it were just we're finding it really difficult to kind of find the voice and to get the sound and also we didn't have the budget for it. So we used an AI tool to create this preacher men sort of not American,

Toby Ricketts

basically like a sample but you wanted to accustomed to

Chris Nicholl

effectively created our own sample using but there was a performance involved in that ultimate I performed it. But you know, the performance was key, you know, and if someone could have performed that better, than we'd have got that person to perform it, whatever. So becomes, as you say, it's an effect. Yeah, using it for an effect rather than replacing an entire industry or an entire person, because in that particular piece, we still had the station voiceover, doing station for sofa bed. So I think, yeah, there's a lot of legal ramifications for replacing voiceovers and using this technology. And I do think, ultimately, although it can be very convincing, looking at some of the scams that are out there using AI technology, I think people want to be interacting with other people. And when you listen to a radio station, or you are on holding on hold on phone, dealing with an automated thing, you know, it's a robot, you want it to be a person, or at least sounds so convincing that it's a person. And so I think that AI is not there doesn't replace people and human interaction, human connection. So I think there'll still be a big need for it. And I'm not aware of anyone using AI tools to replace voices in our space, or in eaten in. Like, just generally, the creative industries space.

Toby Ricketts

I have heard, I have heard of it happening in Australia, like, interesting. Andrew Peters, who's the one of the hosts of the Pro Audio suite, they did an episode about how he was the voice of a major network. And they said, we've we, we've, we've got this digital voice. Now, that's not a person, so we don't need you anymore, which is fairly blunt and brutal. But they might have a backlash. Who knows? Like it's, you know, it's people have got who've got good voices and know how to intuit things are hired for that reason. So maybe there's an X factor that they don't realize they'll lose until it's gone. Who knows?

Chris Nicholl

I wonder if you think about some singers and musicians who release sample packs right of light. So if they're a singer, obviously, it's samples of them singing things or, you know, a great guitarist might it really sample pack of this style of playing guitar. And I see AI as perhaps being a tool in a voiceovers sort of skill set of sure hears my voice modeled by AI that you can license directly from me and use and but if you want premium service, you'll get me to do a session if

Toby Ricketts

I feel like that's, that's the model that's evolving. And that that is happening as we speak. Like there was, you know, their voice models that was like only fans for voiceovers to use my Yeah, exactly. Yeah, I'll say whatever you want

Chris Nicholl

my voice get me to say whatever you want. But I think that that, you know, in all seriousness, I think that that is probably where we will all end up. Even Even people who produce things for radio stations, it will be okay. There'll be tools that I can use to create, it will make me more productive, but it won't necessarily replace me. Now, I know that voiceovers will feel that they can be replaced. And I totally get that that could be the case it could be. But if you are able to utilize that as a stream of income, then people will probably come to Toby for Toby's AI voice.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, yeah. Okay. Hopefully, we can only hope. Yeah, well, should we dive into like, showing people what a imaging session kind of sounds like in terms of giving different options for different lines. And that kind of imaging sound like, like I said, I've had, I've been the imaging voice for a few stations. And there's kind of a certain place that you have to put your voice, at least for the traditional imaging sound that we've been talking about the kind of balls to the wall. exciting thing. And there's also the thing, like, and I've, this is kind of geeking out of it, but there are some voices, or certain like approaches to voices, which compress really well, and others that kind of don't. And it's I've never quite been able to crystallize why that is for some voices, they can press really well.

Chris Nicholl

It's all about dynamic range in the deliverer. If the voice has a very dynamic delivery, it can be difficult to it's not impossible to

Toby Ricketts

control with a compressor. Yeah, sure. Yeah. CPU doesn't like you because

Chris Nicholl

you're loading up 500 instances of ligands to kind of flatten it out. Yeah. Voices just have this rounded delivery that is consistent, makes it a lot easier to make them seem seem bold and yeah, and

Toby Ricketts

self compression. I've heard it where you can kind of use your voice to kind of you kind of like by using the muscles in your voice. You can kind of push push the voice you know, and make it like quite flat like it's like it's had a first layer of compression or anything

Chris Nicholl

It's not like spewing. Exactly.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. I will hopefully we can get close to that. And this without me actually obscuring everywhere. You and we've got it, we got a demo script here. I'm just going to put it on screen there. Hopefully, you can see that. And yeah, I'm just gonna hone into it. What genre should we start off with? To say,

Chris Nicholl

Well, why don't we start with the genre that says actually is sort of, you know, it's like an easy listening station, you know, we talk instead of female skew. You know, probably sort of mid 30s to early 50s. sort of thing.

Toby Ricketts

Nice a nice.

Chris Nicholl

So, so, so warm, inviting, but not I don't think it needs to be big smiles. I think it needs to be a hint of friendliness to the delivery. But again, I like to say, do a big smile when you're saying things but don't necessarily try to like you know, like I'm smiling while I'm talking to you and I think that comes through in the sound of my voice. But I'm not necessarily going so far as to laugh after everything that I'm saying. It make it sound cheesy. Yeah. So it's just trying to reflect that warmth and energy while being happy

Toby Ricketts

cool, Okay, nice. I'm gonna do the first four lines and I'll give you like an ABC on each of them me personally works works quite well on sessions all right.

It's work paths. Bay easy. Bay easy. Bay easy. On Bay easy. On Bay easy. On Bay easy. This is Bay easy. This is Bae easy. This is Bae easy. Good times. Sounds like this. Good Times sound like this. Good Times sound like this.

Chris Nicholl

Yeah, so my, my instant thought is, as we're sort of getting towards the end of that you started to get a little bit more actually quite like the slightly more intimate sound. But I wonder if it's almost too much enunciation. Like they the words I think easy almost like one word. Yeah. Right and capitalize on the on Basie and that this is very easy. I think the bay easy wants to be a little bit more linked. But I'm okay with the joining words not being but I think with good times sound like this again, let it roll through. Don't worry so much about that diction between the times and the sound.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, sure. So like read through the grammar a little bit

All right, let's give it at least given Alicia Basie be easy. Be easy. On BZ on Basie. On Basie. This is Basie. This is Bae easy. This is Basie Good Times sounds like this. Good Times sound like this. Good Times sound like this. Good Times sound like this.

I hate when you do a take and you realize that you've gone against the direction you were just given.

Chris Nicholl

That for me, is much nicer. All I would want to do in a traditional session would be like, bang on the tone, loving the warmth and stuff. But we just love a slower option. Which is difficult because you don't want to break it up too much. But just simply bring the pace down a bit.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. I say everything slower. So instead of like,

Chris Nicholl

just jointed not like this

Toby Ricketts

is PE easy. Yeah, slowing the whole thing down. This is a easy, like, yeah, you

Chris Nicholl

got it. Yeah, you're looking to not break it up. But still. Yeah.

Toby Ricketts

Cool. If we were doing a more like a format, more like BBC Radio One, or one of those edgier formats. And let's go to one of these, like, the weekend jam or the request show, we'll do a couple of those which are in that style. To try and sort of conjure that that energy and throw it through more energy at the mic. See what happens.

Chris Nicholl

Yeah, yeah. And I think yeah, it's going to be brighter, isn't it? It's going to be you don't necessarily need to smile quite as much because you want to be a bit cool. Or you don't want to be unfriendly. So it's, it's that you know, I'm smiling way too much for it. You just want it to be sort of, it's sort of a half side smile rather than a full. I'm really happy about what I'm saying.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, cool. All right. Well, give it a go and get your feedback afterwards.

The request show the request show the request show, weekends, weekends, weekends, the weekend, the weekend, the weekend.

The weekend jam, the weekend jam, the weekend jam clipping over there. Apologies listeners, I think you

Chris Nicholl

can go two directions with us. And I think you could either go, depending on the style of the youth brand, you could either go like more up. So from where you've gone slightly more up and a little bit more energetic, or you can come down and be I'm even cooler and don't care. Yeah. I think let's go up a little bit more and be a little bit more like Yeah, I'm pretty excited about this thing. I liked that the diction wasn't absolutely perfect because it's natural. So yeah, I'd love to hear it slightly more sort of upbeat. Not like you're getting you're not happy. You're just like, yes, the request show like I'm talking to my mates. Yeah, thing.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Cool. Awesome. And it was it was interesting. I just realized that because I could hear myself clipping in my headphones. Like, I didn't project as much which affected the performance. And that's something like for talent to note that, like, if you ever hear like, it's good to like, give yourself like 12 dB of headroom, so that you can go there if you need to, like in terms of projecting, I just thought I'd mentioned that while I was in the moment. All right. So we'll take it up a bit. And I'm gonna turn my game down a little bit. All right. The request show the request show the request show. Weekends, weekends, weekends, the weekend, the weekend, the weekend. The weekend jam, the weekend jam, the weekend jam.

Chris Nicholl

Yeah. And in some brands would push even further, I wouldn't I personally think that that's kind of on the money. And what I like about that is, you know, especially with a lot of these younger brands, you might be chucking in samples of songs and things that they're the audience is familiar with. I hate pop cultural references, because we're not talking Family Guy and Simpsons drops, which is a trope, isn't it? Yeah, I mean, like that it's recognizable to the audience, and then to have the voice stick out with a kind of, you know, yeah, you know, this thing's happening. Cool. Yeah, I think that's quite powerful. And if you'd have taken it down, and be much more kind of, I really couldn't give a shit.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Which is like some of the BBC stuff, you really hear that coming coming through. Absolutely. And that

Chris Nicholl

works for a format, like a youth format. But it can also work quite nicely for a rock format. But again, it will vary. There's a station here in the UK, absolute radio, and they have comedian guy who's like very over the top, bah, blah, blah, blah, terrible imitation of his voice and accent. You know? So again, it really depends on the what the personality of the brand is. So we could we've done what we've done that might not suit any of those stations, they may have something else in their mind entirely. Yeah. And I know that actually. So I was gonna say, you know that like, for example. My my first job that said in, we were very much we started leaning more down a comedy angle, and we had like a female voice over Georgia who was quite cool. And a vote that sort of

Toby Ricketts

Scots very cool. Yeah, had like the smoothness. Yeah,

Chris Nicholl

it was cool a bit of attitude than we used to go through, who was just, he was there to say the snarky stuff and deliberately snarky and deliberately stuff that's a bit sarcastic. And he had that tone. That sounded sarcastic, but we would never direct him to sound cool, more upbeat, because that wasn't what we were after. So it can, you know, whereas that capital, with three voices in the brief was just sound call, you just need to sound shut hot all the time, everything we do, whether we're giving away a car, or we're giving away a car mat, it needs to sound like the best thing ever. And that was what we would do. So it can really vary.

Toby Ricketts

It's worth noting as well for talent that might get themselves into a imaging session. And even just from doing those four lines in quite a high P like, and you say, like I probably would have been produced further at some stations, is very fatiguing. Like, you know, I wouldn't do that for more than 20 minutes without saying like any a 10 minute break. So don't be afraid to ask for breaks when you're doing it because the temptation is to keep pushing it and at that point, you will be useless at about 40 minutes and lose your voice for a couple of days. So don't be afraid to to ask for breaks.

Chris Nicholl

And I think the only thing we probably didn't touch on there was in you know, seasoned professional like yourself wasn't doing it. But some voices can fall into this pattern patterning. I'm saying a thing. Now I'm saying another thing. Now I'm saying a third thing. Now I'm saying a fourth thing with the same inflection and that is something to really be aware of As you want to be mixing, how do you mix the inflections and the tones up while still being in whatever the box is that you're being directed to hurt? Absolutely, that is that's hard. Yeah, absolutely warrant that that's a difficult one. And it takes experience. But I also think it takes someone who is directing you to spot it and say, Hey, can you just try an inflection that's more like X or Y.

Toby Ricketts

X, like I was trying to, like, visualize it. Like you have like sentences that ended up and sentences in the middle, and then once and then down. And like, if you actually, like, you know, you imagine it is like singing notes going up and down. And it's just a case of coming from new shapes that you you've always, but yeah, it's a very good skill to learn as a voiceover artist. Cool. Well, we are pretty much out of time, but it's been fantastic to chat and get really, like surgically precise on this, this fantastic genre of audio branding. I'm gonna call it from now on Thank you. needs every brand,

Chris Nicholl

as you say it to clients, like I want in the gym. Yes, yeah. Yeah. What do ya branding?

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, cuz I did have a question in there about what like, what's the difference between sound design, audio branding, music production, etc. But I guess they're all variations on the theme.

Chris Nicholl

Yeah, totally. I think probably, if you are not from a radio background, music production, sound design, audio branding, makes more sense, Sonic identity. All of that makes more sense. If you're from a radio background, it's radio imaging. And, you know, we find that depending on what client we're talking to, will depend on what language we use. Yeah, absolutely. Thank you for having me. It's been very good. I'm glad I

Toby Ricketts

can help. Yeah, no problem at all. If you want to check out more of the work and I encourage you if you want to get into the genre, it's all you have to listen to what's out there right now to hear what's expected. And like if you can do it like that's, you know, if you have a if you want to make a demo, in your studio, then listen to the sub. It's hard to put together I will say that making your own image and demo almost impossible. That's why there are experts like like Chris in this world.

Chris Nicholl

With these make sure if you do make it you make it an imaging demo, we'll get an imaging demo made provide references to the person making it so that you don't end up with something that doesn't sound like where the fashion is currently.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. So you can find Chris's work at with effects wizzfx.com and encourage you to do so but it's been wonderful to have you on the podcast. Thank you for coming along very much. Very much enjoyed it.

Interview with Hugh Edwards on Voicing for Videogames and TTS

Hugh Edwards is a big fish in the world of voiceover. Having cast hundreds of top game titles, and beings an Emmy judge, AND being the CEO of the world largest Voiceover career platform - Gravy for the Brain - makes him the go to for any current voiceover knowledge. In this interview originally recorded at Christmas 2022, Hugh and Toby Discuss the following:

0:00:00 Intro
0:01:45 Hugh’s history in Acting
0:04:54 When is it ok to do voiceover for free?
0:07:10 How did you get into the world of voiceover?
0:13:40 Career path is an evolution, rather than an absolute
0:15:45 What are some of the biggest titles you’ve worked on?
0:20:08 What a VO needs to do to get into voicing videogame characters
0:23:30 Why is voiceover in games not very well paid?
0:31:11 You’ve been involved in directing Text-to-Speech (TTS) since the beginning, tell us about this journey
0:38:20 What are some of the challenges around AI / TTS voice
0:46:12 Diversity within voice casting for games
0:47:50 What’s some advice for people auditioning for TTS work?
0:50:53 Where did the name Gravy for the Brain come from?
0:53:48 What has been the thing you’ve most enjoyed about 2022?
1:00:42 Is it better to be a voice artist today or 20 years ago?
1:04:20 What’s planned for Xmas?
Find out more about Gravy for the Brain at http://oceania.gravyforthebrain.com

Here is a transcript of the interview:

Toby Ricketts

Welcome to vo live brought to you by gravy for the brain Oceania today, we've got a special guest here. Well, they're always special guests on and let's be honest. It's we as you know, we have like the movers and shakers of the voice world, people are big in the world of voiceover. And last year, I had a wonderful Peter Dixon on for a fireside chat. And I thought, well, it's only right really to to invite his co conspirator on I'm Hugh Edwards, who is of course CEO of gravy for the brain worldwide. welcome you.

Hugh Edwards

All right. Thank you for just placing me in rank a year behind Peter.

Toby Ricketts

I love Exactly. Yeah, there you go.

Hugh Edwards

I know. I know where I'm where I'm supposed to be place, Toby.

Toby Ricketts

It's fine. Exactly. And actually, I nearly forgot, but I didn't quite that. I drank whiskey on that on that show. So I can I can toast you and get slightly drunker as the interview goes on, as we did last year, but there's probably not any whiskey in the in the office where you are. And you know, it's it's 9am it's. So if you were drinking, it would probably be a problem. But

Hugh Edwards

I've got I've got myself a nice coffee, and hello to all of the audience. Thanks for joining us. Cool. So

Toby Ricketts

like lots of ground to cover today in terms of like we want to find out about Hugh Edwards where you've come from all about your kind of how you found the voiceover world and sort of what you've what you've learned from it and what you've done within it. Covering because you like from the the bit of IMDb stalking that I've been doing it introduce you as an actor, producer and voice director and casting director and at the act a bit surprised me Have you acted?

Hugh Edwards

I have actored

Toby Ricketts

what? Well,

Hugh Edwards

so let me see. I've done seven films, I think. And I've been in probably a couple of 100 computer games. But that was mainly because with the computer games, I ended up there was always a few lines that the games company missed. And so rather than just go and hire someone for it, it's like fine, I'll just go and do it. And then they've got you know, a little bit more and more. But I always tended to try and not cast myself because a tiny bit unethical, isn't it? A little bit? Yeah, a little bit. But it was just when there was when there were things that needed filling. So I just run in and do them. So lots and lots of little tiny snippets of games. And yeah, a few films, mainly budget on actual speaking parts. I've been killed a lot of ways. I've been, I've been mauled to death. I have been eaten by a werewolf, zombie or gets ripped out by zombies. I've been chained sawed in half. That was a really good onscreen effect, actually. Yeah. And I was just sort of like hanging there. With no torso. It's quite funny. I would imagine a lot of my enemies like to watching that.

Toby Ricketts

Gosh, this is a site that I completely didn't know it existed so that the challenge for everyone is to go and find these independent zombie films that that start you out. It's being being cut up. So yeah, answers on a postcard, please.

Hugh Edwards

Well, funnily enough, the very first film that I ever did, was a film called Little Big Men. And it was a film as a kid's film. And the idea was, you had these four gangsters, adult gangsters and they stole this massive diamond. And they got caught by the karma police and shrunk into kids. And the kids that the trick was with the shows that the kids retained their adult voices. So it was like one massive ADR gig. And I was one of the characters in that. And I was kind of producing that as well, at the end of it. I mean, talk about low budget, this was really low budget. And at the end of it, we've completely run out of money. We've spent it all on catering, I think, and and I called up my friend, Neil Gardner, who's an audio producer in the UK. And I said, Neil, we need a voiceover and he said, Well, there's always Dixon, and he'll sort of say anything. So I call that this chap who I didn't know called Peter Dixon. And this was in the middle of his X Factor career like 2004. I think it was 2005. And I mean, Peter was big news. You know, he was a household name here. And he said, Yes, I'd love to do it. I said, there's no money. And he said, no worries. And so he just came down. In fact, he actually paid to do it because he paid his own petrol down to the studio. So he came was in this little tiny thing. And then I think a month later, I was doing a game for National Geographic. And so I gave the part to Peter as a sort of, by way of thanks, you know, and, you know, a couple of liquid lunches after that, and that's how we became friends.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, gosh, how interesting and thus GFT be which was born but we're getting ahead of ourselves. So it's kind of, I guess one of those lessons in voiceover that like we always bang on about charge what you're worth, you know, don't do good. Do the race for them. Um, but like, there are occasions when and sometimes it does pay off, like, if you were, if you were doing a favor for someone, or you can see it's going to go somewhere, you know, like he kind of invested in that in that future. And I mean, if you hear DBM done of that, then, you know, we wouldn't be talking probably,

Hugh Edwards

that's true. There's always like a little tiny thing in the corner, that gives you the worry if they say it's for free, but you'll get great exposure, warning signs, because they're just trying to get you for free, right. But there are lots of occasions, I mean, you know, community radio is a very soul fulfilling type of thing. And in general, that's for free. But you get to meet nice people, and you get to have fun with it and, and help out, you know, people either in the community or local hospital, radio, or those sorts of things. charity works very, very good. Not only does it get you through the pearly gates, but it also helps you where helps the charity because you know, they need charitable donations, and your service is one of them. But also, you'll get invited to parties, by the charity for some launch thing or whatever. And you'll be sitting next to a CEO of some company that you just couldn't have sat next to otherwise, because you were involved in the project as well. And they're sponsoring it or whatever it is. These things, I think, are good things to do. I do see an awful I mean, the Facebook groups of this world are simultaneously brilliant and full of horror. Because you see an awful lot of people saying Don't you dare not charge for this you charge your worth and all this kind of stuff. But yeah, I mean, sometimes it works out and sometimes if you want to do a project because it's fun, go do it.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, it's a balance isn't it to total balance because like cam like you say, like I will donate my time the same way I donate my money to to do certain projects like that and like you say it's very fulfilling and you never know what it's going to lead to often doesn't lead to where charity dinners for me because it's the airfares to get there a bit steep.

Hugh Edwards

Also, I mean, you you live further out than Crocodile Dundee went walkabout. Right? You're right in the middle of nowhere. So.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. So where did it all start the voice thing? Have you always been interested in things like voice? Have you got any formal training? Like what was the genesis of your entry into the into the voice and entertainment world?

Hugh Edwards

Well, so I had a kind of acting bent as a kid. I was raised by am grandparents. I was Tiny Tim many a year in the Christmas carol on stage and things like that. And I just loved it when I was a kid. And I was always in theaters, with my parents. And in fact, the first time I ever got drunk was an after show party for one of theirs. But yeah, so I always had that in my youth. And I kind of kept that through, through my teens, and then into my 20s and things like that. But I wanted to be a rock star. That's what I wanted to do. And I was I was a drummer. So Ra went to university hours, never not a drama. And I went to university, and I wanted to move to London and pursue my fame and fortune. And my mother, quite rightly said, no, no, no, you got to get a real job. Otherwise, you're gonna end up on the streets. So I ended up working in investment banking. For nine years, I worked for Credit Suisse First Boston, and then Merrill Lynch. And I ended up being a relatively successful IT project manager there. And I was looking after really big projects. Big team, I think 60 was the last team size I had for this big project I was doing. But it was it was not what I wanted to do. And it was very sapping of all life. And the last four years I worked there, I shouldn't have, but they had these things. These, we used to call them the golden handcuffs in the city, where every Christmas, they'd give you a 15,000 pound bonus. And then in June, they'd give you a 10% pay rise, and you could never leave because you're always waiting for the next thing. Anyway, I was seeing a young lady at the time. And she said, Look, I'm out of here, I'm gonna go around the world for a year you can come or you can stay. But if you'd stay, I guess we're done. And I thought, You know what, this is like a perfect opportunity. So I went around the world with her. Before I did, though, I ended up speaking to Electronic Arts about some music because I've been doing music all the way through, hence the Rockstar dreams. And I went to bed for the second Harry Potter games do the composition for it. And we ended up not getting it. It's a bit of a convoluted story, which I won't go too much into. But we got down to the last two. And when we got down to the last two that we were talking about money and they said to me, what's your what's your what can you do this an hour's worth of music for and having negotiated loads of big contracts at Merrill Lynch which gave me great stead, I suppose for my life, said well, what's your bed Do it. And they said, Well, we couldn't do it for anything less than 30,000. And I was like, Oh my God, there's a living to be made here. So whilst going around the world, me and my best friend Jeremy, we started a company. And as soon as I got back after the travel, we started up and originally we were going to be doing music. This is 2001 I think it was. And we did so much music, we got a great contract for ITV, which is a big TV station here in the UK. And in a year, we did something like 250 commercials. It was it was very, very lucky, very fortunate. But it completely set us up. And then one day, this games company that we were composing for, for Steve Davis as World Championship, snooker said to us, you do dialogue, right. And we went, Yeah, sure, we do. Yeah. And having had a bit of training, and then a bit of directing of local stuff. And this, that and the other. We got Steve Davis in and we directed him and absolutely loved it. At the same time as the dialogue career 2000 to 2003 started to take off, I was falling out of love with music, it became like paint by numbers. Because one games company would say, Okay, we want some John Williams Star Wars II type stuff. Great. We'd go and do that. And the next one would be like, we want the Bourne Identity big drums Bum Bum bum. Great would do that. And the next one would be rafter sort of John Williams, like Star Wars type thing. Right? Right. Okay. And the next one would be like, we definitely want Bourne Identity as close as you can get. Okay, and it just, it just got really tiresome. But the dialogue was was allowing us to, to be creative and work with actors and, and bring life to things that at the time were being done. Not so well. You know, the dialogue in games used to be a bit of a joke. In the old days, it wasn't particularly good. Not not all, in all cases, of course, there were some really good things, but in the main, it wasn't brilliant. And so it just kind of took off. And I just did game after game after game and really loved it. And that was the kind of start of it. About getting into dialogue. Meeting Peter, as I said, 2014 and five. Then we just became friends for a while we set up another company called My ready voice, which was kind of one of the world's first TTS models, I suppose. Because it was concatenating phrases. Yeah, it would be like Toby, happy birthday. And you could sort of download that, but it would calm things on the fly. Right? And we phrases, right? It was Yeah, exactly. Yeah. It was like more like the train station version TTS, rather than what we see now. But yeah, so we did that. And, and it was it was a meteoric success until the iPhone came out. And then everyone realized that they didn't want ringtones or downloadable content for phones anymore, and it literally fell off a cliff. But by that point, we were we were getting into the training side.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Gosh, how interesting. So, so yeah, it's quite a sort of long weaving path. And it's explained so much, so much that I didn't know about you, especially the investment banking part, with the asking, asking about the budget, and all that sort of stuff. It's so interesting that like, there are all these skills that you learn on your journey, be it short or long that you kind of that you can apply in future to future future skills, you know, especially especially like things like that you'll learn about always ask about the price first. Because if you go in and say 100 quid, and they say, Oh, we were actually thinking 50,000, but no, your sounds better.

Hugh Edwards

Well, or even worse, this guy can't be any good. If he's only charging 100 quid because all the other quotes, we've got three or 4000

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. Yeah, totally. So

Hugh Edwards

that's what I do. You know, though, I, I say to, I mean, I've got children. And one of the things that, in hindsight, always perplexed me was why careers advisors at school never told you that, that your career path is an evolution. You know, it's very, very rare that you set out to be a postman, and you're always going to be a postman. You know what I mean? It's just, your life doesn't go like that. It meanders. And I really wish that they would tell children that when they're teens, because the pressure of having to having to just be an architect, ya know, that that's what you're gonna do. It must be really difficult.

Toby Ricketts

And I think studies say these days that people have five or six careers, if not more, right. So that was from a few years ago. So I mean, they're, you know, this this thing at the moment that employers are facing about how millennials just like, if they're not having a job, they'll just leave it and just like have, you know, 10 jobs in a year? Because there's obviously more jobs, which is yeah, like you say, so. That's how interesting that's, that's really interesting. And you've worked with some, some fairly big clients like after that in terms of like getting into the casting for gaming. After that point, like, you know, you've you've you've I was looking at your credits here. I mean, there's lots of really big stuff that Harry Potter name comes up quite a bit. What are some of the biggest jobs that you've worked on as a as a games director or casting and then directing for gaming?

Hugh Edwards

Well, I mean, The biggest name one is Harry Potter. Probably because that's one of the biggest name productions in the whole world, right? I got Harry Potter and my friend got Game of Thrones, you know, you win some you lose some. But that one I mean, I was by no means the biggest dialogue producer in the UK at the time. High score, which is one of my other companies that does all the production high school productions, which I wish I in hindsight again had not named it that because whenever I call anyone out there like high school productions, what's that?

Toby Ricketts

But anyway, it's clear, though, it's very clear, but

Hugh Edwards

well, because it was originally meant to be for music, right? So yeah, exactly. Yeah. Anyway, so yeah, I mean, we weren't the biggest. But we, we had a reputation for being very diligent, and always been very responsive. And we got the Harry Potter gig on recommendation, because the producer at the time was saying, okay, yeah, you can go with these guys. But you really gonna get looked after if you go with these guys. And that's what they wanted. So, clients, so we did that. Yeah. And it was a really interesting game to work on. Because it's one of the even though it's one of the biggest ones I've done. It's one of the few that was invoice matching. And so it was acting with invoice matching for the majority of it. The other side of it was creating characters that weren't in the films or the books, and trying to create good characters that sounded like they were from the world, which was, which is really good fun. But I've done. I mean, you've got to be a real gamer to know some of the biggest stuff I've worked on. Fallout three is a pretty big name and the gaming Fallout three Elder Scrolls Oblivion. Yeah. Lots of racing titles like Moto GP, Beijing Olympics, things like that. And now,

Toby Ricketts

here's the game boards challenge.

Hugh Edwards

And there's another one checkers, checkers party quiz, which was a funny one, you'd have to know who checkers is to get why that's funny. But he was a real character. Yeah, so I mean, I don't know what the final score is. It's over 300, something like that projects I've done of those. Not all of them are on IMDb. I have to say there's a lot more on the high score credits list. Yeah. And so I mean, most of the games that we did get some big ones like that, of course, but a lot of the games were smaller as well. And there's nothing wrong with small games. Nowadays, the I don't do all that many games. Now. I mainly do games that I still got contacts with where they still want me to go and do things for them. Because nowadays, I work mainly in the film sector. And that's, that's the area that I that I've kind of evolved into a little bit. But yeah, I mean, games are now kind of iterative. I mean, I do a lot of MMOs, which I've got one that I've been working on since 2017. And it's just so successful every other month, they release a new DLC or a new mission or something like that. And then that's another, you know, 15 days of dialogue. It's the game that keeps on giving. So

Toby Ricketts

lots of acronyms character in MMOs is massively multiplayer online.

Hugh Edwards

Yes. Yeah. The big online games that everyone joins and all plays together. Yeah. Right as DLC downloadable content.

Toby Ricketts

ancient texts effectively, right?

Hugh Edwards

Yeah, but the but nowadays there. You don't have to go and buy the CD for it.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, absolutely. And while we're on games, because like, I had a question that I want to ask about, like the evolution of games, because I am, I actually spent a recent time with, with my buddy, we agreed to set aside a day and just immerse ourselves in games because he hadn't gotten to VR. And I've had, I've gotten the VR rig and definitely gotten to VR. And I hadn't got into any PlayStation titles or anything like that. And he was like, you have to come and like play like The Last of Us or something. Just totally get it. And yeah, hi, was my favorite game of all time. Totally. And it's, I mean, it's it is one of those seminal games that people just hold up as, like, this is the way it's meant to be done. And I played The Last of Us, too.

Hugh Edwards

And I was just really spoilers because it's in cellophane for me. Oh,

Toby Ricketts

nice. Yeah. Fantastic. I mean, I was amazed at how much like movies games are. Now, basically, there's this crossover, where you're actually watching the movie, but you get to, like, sometimes you're on rails, sometimes you've got a bit more agency about what's going on in the world. But it does feel like a movie. It's just being rendered in real time. With

Hugh Edwards

Yeah, I mean, The Last of Us. My when I was with my ex partner, we played The Last of Us together. And within the first 15 minutes, she was crying. Yeah, I mean, that's the emotional hook that that game has. Yeah, it's really quite special. But I mean, there are so many games, like the modern combats. One more Call of Duty Modern Warfare. Yeah. My friend Kirsty Gilmore has just worked on that. She has done very well with it. And yeah, in fact, we've I think we've just booked her for one Voice UK for this year. Oh, fantastic. Come and talk about games and experiences in that because she's doing really, really well.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Yeah, actually. And on that note, I've, because again, I've been kind of researching because I'm fascinated by the game genre, because I've never really, I've worked in it a little bit as a full service. And I'd like to do it more, which involves research and you got to find out what kind of games there are, what kind of kind. And a YouTube is such a fantastic resource because it lets you you don't have to actually go out, buy a console, buy the game, and then spend 16 hours playing the game, you can literally just watch someone else play it. And it's just about as enjoyable if not more enjoyable, because you've got all this amazing.

Hugh Edwards

I would disagree with you a little bit. But yeah, I mean, finally, what you're about to say is the is the opening to our gaming courses. I'm gonna start researching the watch the playthroughs

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, obviously. And like I kind of I just wanted to take a look because it was actually it was actually because Kirstie poker posted about this and said, I've just been involved with this project. And I was like, I've heard about this, I want to go see what it is I started watching, I think the previous one call of duty to Modern Warfare yet or that is that the current one I

Hugh Edwards

think landholders or something or other.

Toby Ricketts

But um, and I just couldn't stop watching. It was like addictive, like because they got the scene length just right. And they got all of the clever hooks and the action beats just at the right point and like so the choreographed so much like an action movie that it's it's crazy. And the storylines are so good. And I'm fascinated just how much like movies there. I mean, gaming, outpaces movie in terms of revenue hugely now doesn't overtook long it does now.

Hugh Edwards

Yeah. Especially since on demand TV has become so popular movies have gone down as well. So the relative balance within games has gone up. But it massively changed when they started paying attention to the storylines and the story arcs and actually hiring proper writers in to do these games. I

Toby Ricketts

suppose there was always Yeah, this wasn't Yeah, yeah.

Hugh Edwards

Because yeah, I mean, in the very early days, sometimes you had like the art director, or whoever writing the script, you know, and you could, you could do your best. But at the end of the day, the story arc was what it was, you know, it's been an it's been an evolution of all sides of the, if the game development world, it really has, from the education all the way up to the top of people understanding that they need to put more investment into to the production of these and that it does matter that you have a story writer there from the beginning, and that the scene directors are there from the beginning, and the voice directors there from the beginning and stuff. So yeah, the whole thing has evolved hugely. Ironically, my favorite games that I'm playing at the moment, are racing games, which are blogging, no. Wonder if that says something about me.

Toby Ricketts

And just quickly on the VR thing, I know you're on it, because I've seen because we're friends on Facebook, and I've got an Oculus quest, to it shows me that you like you're not online, which means you are part of the system that you're not online at the time. But I've been playing Half Life, Alex, which is like incredible video game and has some pretty good voice acting, too. But a great storyline as well. But amazing world building going on. The only problem was sorry, you know, I

Hugh Edwards

was just gonna say this is one of the downsides to the walkthroughs is that there is something addictive. If you haven't played games, there's something addictive about playing them getting killed, getting up and getting getting past that person. And then especially if you've got a headset on, it's a different experience than watching it on YouTube altogether. Yeah, there's actually

Toby Ricketts

no way to talk about or experience what VR is like without actually doing it yourself as my experience. Yeah,

Hugh Edwards

it's like diving. You have to do it, to understand it. Yeah, exactly. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

totally. So we're gaming and voiceover overlaps, which is, you know, quite a lot of it because it's, it's everything else, pretty much as you know, it's stories written and everything's generated in the computer. And then the soundtrack and the voiceover obviously have to be made by real people. And, like, I've been really surprised in getting into the gaming stuff that gaming, voice work isn't better paid, because it's pretty quick requires incredible talent, and commitment. So what do you have to say about like, relative rates for things like gaming, because I mean, even the sag, you know, rates in the states are much less than the commercial rates, and even the corporate rates, industrial rates. So how do you explain the fact that there's some a bit of difference?

Hugh Edwards

Well, firstly, there is a historical precedent set for rates in gaming. And, like most industry, I mean, at the moment, we're trying to argue the ILR rates in the UK which are historically set incredibly low, just because of the way that they evolved in the in the beginning, which doesn't apply to now. That's That's one reason. And so budgets are built based on those kind of historical precedence. The second reason is that there is a just like films. You know, Gary Oldman is going to get 20 million, and the guy who comes on for the one scene with one line, who's spent just as many, just as much money in acting training or whatever, is not going to get 20 million, you know, he's going to be on a, on a very, very different pay scale. So, you know, if you go and try and book Troy Baker, you're gonna pay an awful lot more than if you book a relative unknown from an agency, it's the way it is, it's supply and demand. So games are also based on that, because they want certain style or some do. I mean, some, some games just will have unknowns in them. But very often, I mean, I did a game with Stephen Fry, for example. And I mean, I won't tell you what his budget was. But it was a large part of the dialogue of what the boss constituent part of the dialogue, budget, and that was done with budget from the marketing side, because they know they can market the game, because it's got Stephen Fry in it. So it's a combination of all of those things. And then at the same time, you also have to understand that a lot of games companies are successful. And, you know, if you look at Naughty Dog or Rockstar, you know that they're big, big, successful companies. But you look at someone like Rovio, who did Angry Birds, who are, you know, a massively successful when Angry Birds was successful, it was their 52nd game and the 51 before it lost money, you know, and these guys were mortgaging second, mortgaging their houses to be able to do that. So it's not always the case. I mean, if you go down to the the develop conference in Brighton, or the business side of E three, or, or game connection in Paris, or any of these industry conferences that happen, you'll find the big cheese's in one corner on a small table, and then the rest of the conference full of indie developers all doing games. And they're all set the same kind of way. So yeah, the bigger games tend to have slightly bigger budgets, and you can negotiate your way up there, the smaller games, in general don't have that much budget to actually play with in the first place.

Toby Ricketts

There's a bit of a pumped sort of a risk from their perspective.

Hugh Edwards

Right? Yeah. And this is also a commercial enterprise. You know, this isn't the BBC, these are sere a solo business people, you know, sometimes solo, sometimes two or three of them, raising finance, friends and family, you know, and they're the ones taking all the risk, you get to go in and do your job and then walk away. So whilst they absolutely understand that there is a question mark, sometimes over the rates on gaming, I think it's also fair to say that games are absolutely symbiotic. You know, if the art doesn't work, it's going to be crap, even if the dialogue is great. If the dialogue is crap, it's going to be a rubbish game, if the physics engine doesn't work properly, all of these things combined, and everyone has paid a wage to go and do what they do to make the end product. So just because the person is an actor, does not mean that their input is better than the guy who wrote the physics engine. You know, and I think that's the one thing that, that the world didn't really get when sag came about that the games company said, I'm sorry, this is just a totally collaborative process. And, you know, if we put you as an actor on royalty, we would have to put the physics engine guy on royalty, because they're just as important. So it's not the same thing, as as films and TV. Even if out is your question, there's probably just as many arguments against that, as there are, so it's

Toby Ricketts

very useful to to always look behind them figure out, you know, why it is the case. And as you say, it does make make a lot of sense. That, that, that it's arrived at that, you know, and and different sort of genres seem to have different parts to a rate. And, you know, usually commercial, the reason that the top rates and commercial are so big is because those companies will leverage it voiceover and make millions off it, like off that one ad, it has to be right, and you have to hit like, you know, have have that that magic that they're looking for, which is,

Hugh Edwards

you know, I mean, I'm not going to name the name of the person. But for those of you guys who are watching this who don't know, the reason that Toby and I know each other is because Toby cleaned up at the One Voice Awards. I think it was 2018 and 2019. And we just said, right, well, this is the guy we've got to make work for us in Oceania. And so we've kind of tied you down to that which has been which has been lovely and a pleasure. But but but you have a very specific skill when it comes to doing commercials. And that's what people pay for, you know That's why you get those ads for BMW and whatever. And I remember hiring you to go and help coach a friend of mine who was auditioning for one of those types of things to say, look, if you want to do it, here's the guy who's going to show you how to do it, because it's, you know, he's outstanding at it. So those commercial things, you really do get what you pay for. Sometimes, again, you they pay for big names. Others they don't. I mean, I've always had a bit of a bugbear that they would that things like Kung Fu Panda out of Pixar, or Disney or wherever they came from. We're always marketed on the fact that Jack Black was the voice when actual fact if you go back just a few just a decade and have a look at what Disney were doing. The names in things like Aladdin were all unknown, but they were way better voice actors, you know, way better voice actors. And then and then you just got this thing where it's just like, Okay, this stars in this one. You know, whoever it is Gwyneth Paltrow is blah blah, blah with a Pixar Animation designed around her. Great, it sounds a bit but it's not particularly brilliant voice acting.

Toby Ricketts

They've done a little bit of original stuff recently, like Mallanna and stuff. It's getting better. Yes. Yeah. Yeah, that's getting more sort of diversified. Especially which is which is good. Cool. So well, games and and and fees and everything. Thanks for going down that that little path with me, um, rabbit hole, that rabbit hole? Absolutely. So and one of the other big, big things you're you're known for. And one of the big things on your kind of on your who you've worked for sheet is a big it's a big question mark around 2014 and a massive client who you're under NDA for, for helping them develop TTS. Are you still under NDA for that?

Hugh Edwards

Yeah. And, and I was speaking to someone on a webinar live the other day, who used to work for that company just I said, I can't talk to and he said, Oh, wasn't it bla bla bla. And I was like,

Toby Ricketts

so it's a big company.

Hugh Edwards

It's a big, one of the top five big companies in the world. Yeah, yeah. So you have brought it doesn't 12 was the first one. All right. The first one? Yes, I did put them here. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

absolutely. So you were bought in this, this thing that's called TTS, which has suddenly kind of enveloped us and like, was totally like, it's amazing to go back to 2012. In places like that. And thinking like that, this was like, you know, your computer speaking to you. And speaking in a very natural and believable way, was, you know, when when we thought of computer generated voices, we thought of Stephen Hawking. And it was very clear that it was being made up by a computer. But, you know, fast forward to now. And it's like part of that tapestry of our lives like that our computers talk to us all the time about everything at the stuff, the Zoom call, the lady informed us that this has been recorded. And so like, way back to be fair, well, that's true. That is just bad speech synthesis as well. So take us back to that beginning of TTS and and how you were you got involved in this, this large project,

Hugh Edwards

which segues quite nicely on to it for gaming. The very nearly said the company that the the company in question have to be careful. They clocked on to the fact really early, that they couldn't go to just normal voice agents and normal casting directors, especially people who did like commercials or TV, because they had no experience directing long form whatsoever. The only sector that had experience casting, going through huge voice casting things, and then doing long form direction weeks and weeks at a time with a game people. So although I'm not supposed to know, I happen to know that three of us who worked for this company, three separate companies were all in the game dev world. And so we we were the experts, by de facto by default, you know, because we were the ones doing that kind of work. Although it was quite new for us at the time. So we would we just went through massive casting there. And when I say big, I mean, you know, we're talking a couple of 1000 people down to one voice. And it wasn't in those days, there weren't the big pay to plays where you'd say, okay, 1000 voices, please. And they'd go short, Bing, or click here they are, you know, it just didn't work like that. We were having to go around all of the agents, we were having to be very creative, where we found people. Especially, I mean, I've done 40 I think it's 48 for them 48 Different TTS models now. And especially the majority of those were not English, UK. So you know, I've been I've traveled very well from that job, but going to places like, you know, Russia and Slovenia, and Thailand and I can't even remember the ones I've done for them. I'm trying to find that many people in those territories where they don't have voice agents, you know, was a really difficult casting gig. But you know, we had experience doing it. So, we were creative, and we and we found the right people. And so I'm not entirely sure what I can. And I got to be a little bit careful. But 2012 was the first one we did. And in those days, it was concatenative. So, as we were talking about earlier on, when you mentioned phonemes, the analogy for people who are watching is, as we were saying, you know, Toby, one phrase, happy birthday, second phrase, yet, whatever. So that's concatenating, two phrases stick gluing them together. And what the first evolutions of this would do is they would chop them into phonemes, which are the very smallest parts of dialogue. In actual fact, they were, if you want to be technical about it, they were Demi phonemes, because it crossed the middle of a phoneme to the next one, because it made them easier to glue. But because of that, we would have to record massive amounts, massive amounts of dialogue. So the first one I ever did was was six months recording. And it was five days a week, four hours a day for six months.

Toby Ricketts

Wow, no stop. And including just covering the phonemes. Like was this actually saving into like wav files, and then like uploading,

Hugh Edwards

so we created wav files, they built the tech to go and do all the chopping, and whatever. But it was it was very, very specific. And and this is why at the time, you had to say everything in the exact same prosody pattern, because you stood much more of a chance of of lining everything up and making it not sound buggy. The bugs are the bits that sound like where you get a little jump between a pitch shift. And it sounds a little bit like it's burbling. So that was how it originally worked. And we just did loads of them, you know, and this is, alongside all the other things we were doing, like, you know, gaming, and this, that and the other. And, Grover the brain, of course, you know, it was a very, very busy part of my life, I'm having children as well. Very busy. Yes, all of so that's how we got into it. It evolves massively, and very, very quickly into algorithmic and then different, almost like a kind of computer synthesis version of, and then it got into the taco Tron models, and then it's evolved since that, as well. So there's, it's been a really interesting thing to do, what it has done is it's given me a behind the scenes insight into not just text to speech, and which is the old way of saying it's aI voices now, which I disagree with a little bit, because AI is very far from Ai. It is not artificially intelligent at all, it's just an algorithm. But it is what it is. And I because of that I've got a lot of knowledge about how the whole industry works, how the whole sector works. And also about, you know, the casting process, when you're shortlisted down of those massive castings down to the very final one, they really want you, they really, really want you. So you have much more leverage than you think. And in fact, I was I was talking to a friend of mine, who was negotiating a game recently, who that they'd spent three or four months trying to find this one character. And I said to her, let, if they're offering you the contract, now you've got so much more leverage, you know, go and go for double. And she did and she got it. You know, and so it's something to bear in mind.

Toby Ricketts

Absolutely. Yeah. And, I mean, like, it's been a big part of the conversations that have happened in the voice world for the last two years, because it's, that's where it's really it felt like about two years ago, it's, it's suddenly became mainstream. And lots of small companies picked up the taco Tron to model and they put their own, you know, front ends on it and started, everyone started, you know, saying this is gonna replace voices. So there were a bunch of different sort of assaults on VoiceOver, not only that, like our work could be replaced, but we could be hired to do the work and then not receive any kind of royalty, like on our voices could be used for anything, which is, you know, in a few cases, especially the big standing case, which was kind of a landmark case from last year. That was proven to be kind of true. What do you think the biggest challenges are, where we are now because there's, we know a lot more about how these models are, there's a lot more knowledge about the fact that you know, your voice can be kind of like, quote, unquote, stolen? Yeah. What do you think the some of the challenges are? Where it stands?

Hugh Edwards

Well, there are a lot of challenges. So in the UK, we have a union called equity and equity are currently fighting a law that's trying to be passed through Parliament at the minute, which is saying that the AI companies can freely data mine, anything that's out there. So for example, they could go and data on any clips of you on YouTube and go and build a model from that. Wow. And you have no recourse for it. You can't stop them doing it. So clearly that's trying to be fought. That's one challenge.

Toby Ricketts

Who came up with also On what basis like because I heard about this, and I thought it must be it must be not true, because it's like, clearly ridiculous. But

Hugh Edwards

what it's been there for a long time. The the the original law has been there even in EU law to be able to assist AI companies and getting started. But not to be able to use your likeness or use your voice or whatever. And the new iteration of the law is so wide open, that it would allow all those sorts of things, even though it doesn't explicitly, explicitly say it, so that they're trying to get the law tightened back down again.

Toby Ricketts

It's concerning, isn't it? Good, Lord.

Hugh Edwards

It's very concerning. Yeah. So that's one kind of concern, then there are, it's fair to say that it is a very chaotic market right now. And in chaotic markets, there is lots of opportunity from both sides, so that can be seen as a positive. But it also can be seen as a worry. And the best standing case is a good example of that. Now, for anybody who's not clued up on TTS, who's interested or AI voices, go and have a look at the blog on grave the brain that I put on there. It's about as comprehensive going through all of the different aspects of TTS and the pitfalls currently, that we all know about and what to look out for, for certain jobs. Because there's, there are lots of different types of jobs, there are training jobs, there are voice jobs. There are model based jobs. So yeah, it's worth reading that blog so that you can you can get your head around it.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, I might go do that. Because I've always been a bit a bit unclear about you know, what, what the difference is they say, it's just been used to train an AI or what your voice won't be used? And you're like, Yeah, but if it's training on my voice, it's probably going to sound a bit like me, you know? So I'm sure you explain that in the article. But other?

Hugh Edwards

Well, yeah, just to get on to that. So I mean, you have a pitch pattern, a prosody pattern. So I can I can extract it's called the, the F curve, I can extract that frequency curve, the frequency of your voice, and use that as a map to train a model without using your actual sound. Yeah, in exactly the same way, as auto tuners do, they work out what your what your pitch curve is, and then they adjust that. So this is not adjusting it. This is taking that as a template and putting it on. So it's still not using your actual voice.

Toby Ricketts

But it does sound a lot like it's it's the process that is associated with my, my performance, if you like,

Hugh Edwards

Yeah, I mean, if you think of, I mean, lots of actors that are that are caricatures, Stallone or someone, you know, Stallone has that kind of same type of thing, you put that onto a model, it's going to end up sounding a bit like Stallone, isn't it even if it's even if it's an impersonator, so it's a very unclear legal market at the moment, what is clear is that Pandora's Box will never be shut again. Unless some EMP pulse kills all the world's electronics, it's here to stay right and it's going to carry on. So I do think there's a lot of opportunity in that chaos. Gaming is a great example, where, once you create a TTS model, it sounds like that model. You know, if you if you're really, really sad and unhappy, that it will, the model will come out like that. And so you can build character models, which is what they want for games. Once you've built one, it sounds like that character, and it will only perform like that character. So they're not gonna go and put it in a different game, they might put it in the second iteration, but then I could have been in a different one. So it's only going to be used for that game. So that's a really good example of where an AI model can be really useful, where you're paid to go and create the model, and then whatever usage but then they can use that in an online way to just generate content all the time. And the same, in the same sense, as the

Toby Ricketts

one of the best uses of AI that I've heard is dynamic content within within, you know, multiplayer games, or just all video games so that you can have, you know, you've got chatbots that come up with original texts. And it's just, it's just the next logical step of that to have a voice that reads it. And you'd never get an actor to read a billion pages of scripts so that you have every possible word combinations. So it's, it does seem like the next logical step. And I liked the idea that that can be tied up to that character. So you know, as long as it's the company that owns it, and you're kind of either reimbursed very well to start off with the performance or there's some kind of royalty, then it sounds like everyone could be happy.

Hugh Edwards

There are a couple of other good models, the the Evergreen version of yourself is also a good model, where you create yourself and then you use your model to fulfill long form or whatever it is you want to do. The only downside to that one is that the marketplace doesn't exist properly for that yet. We're all waiting for it to happen. I suspect it's only really going to come in and then take off one once. Blockchain and NF T's managed to sort out watermarking and traceability of of audio, because then you actually can track it and you don't have to worry about the fact that your voice ends up on a sex doll or a porn site or whatever it is. Yeah. Which which is happening with with some TTS models,

Toby Ricketts

and voice 123 Sounds like they're kind of dipping their toe into that arena is one of the big players you know, they're getting heavily into into voice and, and making their own models of Have their their voices. So that's kind of interesting dividends

Hugh Edwards

that the other one, I did a webinar the other day with a company called altered AI. And they have a really interesting one where they they're doing speech to speech, which is different to text to speech. Yeah. So that speech to speech? Yeah, it's great, isn't it? Yeah, speech and speech is basically where you act out with a different person's voice. So it's analogous to motion capture where you're putting on a suit. And then the end result has a different skin of you know, a different person or a gorilla, or whatever it may be. This is you putting on a different voice. So, for example, I could act and have the voice be a child's voice, or, you know, an 80 year old female's voice, but I'm actually acting that voice out. So that's another really interest. I mean, again, that opens huge moral and ethical dilemmas of how you charge it and performance based on usage. And it's a very unknown area yet, but it's very exciting, I think, yeah, absolutely,

Toby Ricketts

gosh, especially in sort of gaming, like you say, but the, the top games guys are just do every voice and just pitch shift into different roles.

Hugh Edwards

But you know, I mean, there's, for the last few years, there's been a very interesting debate going on, mainly at the voice conferences, about diversity, and about who should be doing certain jobs. And whether a white person should be doing a black person's job, and whether someone from Samoa should be doing a French person's job and this, that and the other. And it's interesting, because traditionally, especially with gaming, the idea is that you're, you have as much ability as possible, so that you can go and do your main character, and then go and do the French guy, and then go and do the German guy, and then do the wizard. And this and the other. And, I mean, I'm not really sure where that debate ended, if it even has ended. And it's an important debate to be having. But what is interesting about this, is that speech to speech is going to blow all that out of the water. Because how, I mean, you've then got the performance of someone doing it, and are they doing it authentically, and so on and so forth? And if they are, why bother using speech to speech in the first place? And you know what I mean, it's a really interesting,

Toby Ricketts

yeah. How do you cast someone who's, like by their voice whose voice is going to be radically altered?

Hugh Edwards

Right? Yeah. I mean, Andy Serkis has got away with it yet, because there aren't any golems or King Kong's he's, he's been alright. Yeah, but you're fine.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah,

Hugh Edwards

that's exactly

Toby Ricketts

how interesting yeah, very, very cool. So and like we say, gaming, big TTS has been big in your sort of career. I was gonna ask quickly about, like, tips for people who want to either get into TTS or, or direct, you know, TTS sessions, or whether we're like, it's it's quite a niche, and he's sort of a thing, but like, what's the important thing to remember when someone is voicing for TTS or or or trying to get TTS voice sounds that consistency? Or is it now more authenticity? Would you say?

Hugh Edwards

That's a really difficult question.

I don't know. Well, okay, let me go back to the stuff that I that I was casting, we had a specific word, and I can't tell you what the word is because it will tell you who the company is. But it was kind of like, sort of TTS ish, right? So we would ask ourselves, okay, do they sound in the right kind of age bracket? Yes. Do they sound? Are they consistent? Yes. Am I going to be able to work with them? For that longer period? Yes. And that was just as big a consideration as well. Have they got good enough experience? Yes. And then the last one was, do they sound TTS ish. And that that one thing was the thing that got rid of 90% of the people who we were casting in the end. And I don't I cannot give you a written or verbal. This is what you have to do to be a TTS voice because anyone could do it. But to actually get the voice that everyone seems to want and like and hear that isn't aggravating that sounds right. That's warm in certain deliveries with certain text. That's, that's not too cold in other ones, you know, that can that can say that, you know, I don't know. There was a Holocaust and a million Jews were killed. And that can also say that you've had a package delivered, and it's still all work and still make sense and still be fluid, and it's a really, really difficult thing. The only advice I can really say is be yourself, I guess. Maybe ever so slightly more positive than neutral as a voice. So not big head jazz hands, but But you know, but not not unhappy so that you're sounding warm and confident. Yeah. And another thing that's massively, yeah, interesting. Cool. Funnily enough, I would say, if I were to give it a percentage, there were some people who were relatively inexperienced, out of the 48 that I cast, but I would say 95% of them had been pros for a long time, because they knew how to really control their voice. So yeah, experience counts for a lot as well.

Toby Ricketts

Cool. Very nice. All right, pivoting to gravy for the brain. We've got to talk about the name, because everyone asks, and I do know the story. And people asked me and I say, I can't remember the story. It must not be that interesting. Am I correct?

Hugh Edwards

Okay. Well, no, it is quite interesting. So, this, it's a bit of a clang, I'm afraid. It's a family friend of my mother's actually, a chap called Patrick Stewart. He's an actor. Who did that one. Yeah. Who, who did a film. And it was called conspiracy theory. And there's a bit where he jabs Mel Gibson in the neck with some truth serum. I think it is. And Mel,

Toby Ricketts

should work on Mel Gibson. That's your work? Yeah.

Hugh Edwards

He jumps in there and Mel's freaking out? And he says, what is it? And Patrick says It's gravy. It's gravy for the brain. And I thought what a lovely phrase. And I was we were looking when Peter and I was setting up to incorporate the company for not only something that had a URL available, but also something that that meant something that was that meant something to what we were trying to do. And actually originally a lot of people don't know this is that grave, the brain was not set up just to do voice it was set up more as a sort of udimi type thing to do different types of courses. And in the very early years, we also recorded things like an art of service course, we did a drumming course we did public speaking, we did lots of weird different types of courses. But it turns out that better what you know is what you're good at. And me and Peter were good at voice. And so we kept focusing on it. And that's where we got all the traction. So we ended up getting rid of everything else. But gravy for the brain meant food for thought. And so that's what it kind of originally came from. But it had it had a bonus and it had a negative. The bonus was everyone remembered it. And secondly, that it didn't have the word voice in it, funnily enough, because if you look at every single other company in our sector, they've all got the word voice and it's somewhere. And it means that SEO was really hard. Whereas for us it wasn't. The negative, of course, is that you have to tell people what on earth it is. And so our marketing budget has been a little bit higher.

Toby Ricketts

We need to we need to take that phrase from the movie and somehow get right to use it. Can you use videos less than 10 seconds long or something? We just need to put that at the front of every all of our videos.

Hugh Edwards

Maybe? I'll ask I'll ask Patrick. Yeah, but yeah, it was his suggestion anyway.

Toby Ricketts

Oh, nice. And then we next next time you're seeing it for a beer or something? years. So that's pretty that's that's the year that does explain that I can I can remember that. I'm going to go away and look, look up the scene.

Hugh Edwards

It's a really great film. You should watch it. Yeah, it's Mel Gibson, Patrick Stewart and Julia Roberts.

Toby Ricketts

Big fan of Patrick Stewart. I think he's, he's, he's fantastic. Yeah, so we've kind of covered you know, come up to Christmas, past, present and future. We've covered the past we've covered the present a little bit, I just want to end the present with like, what some of the big moments have been this year for like the voice world and for them for you sort of personally in the in the voice realm. Not the voice realm, the size, but

Hugh Edwards

I'd mentioned that. So for me personally, I've really enjoyed working on feature films in the last few years, and this year as well. I've literally just finished working on the fourth Expendables film, with Stallone and Statham and Megan Fox, which will be out early next year, I think. And I've done quite a few other films that highlight for me working with Martin Campbell, who's a director who did Casino Royale and golden eye and things like that. And I worked on a couple of films with him. One called memory with Liam Neeson and guy. Oh, Australian actor, doesn't it? ESM IPs, yes. And another one called the protege with Michael Keaton, and Sam Jackson, which was great fun. So yeah, those are really, really it's been an evolution, where I sort of graduated into the Hollywood films, which has been really, really good fun. And it's also good for my CV and just massively fun to work on, you know, great party. Yeah, yeah, they are. They really are. And the Yeah, so and the premier has a friend too.

Toby Ricketts

So in the capacity of like, ADR direction, or like, what sort of how do you interface with the film?

Hugh Edwards

Yeah, ADR, with the principles and the secondaries, and then looping and doing the background looping tracks as

Toby Ricketts

well, right. Yeah. So is there, ADR? Now there's been contention, because I've always taught it, that there's a bunch of different ways. It's either additional dialogue, replacement, or automated dialogue, replacement, or something else, which one of those

Hugh Edwards

so it all means the same thing. Those days, it was all historically based on the method that you used to do it. Nowadays, it's all done on computers and keyboards and things like that. So it's, it's all just looping basically, crowds, and those sorts of things. The ADR stuff with the principal and the secondary characters, principle being the main actors, secondaries being the ones that are either on or off screen or put on for some other reason. That's a skill in itself, because you have lip sync to do. And, or you're replacing dialogue and replacing performance. And sometimes it doesn't look right. And people forget about breathing. And the only downside to it for me is that, unfortunately, it's one of those things that you you have to be so analytical that's kind of ruined films for me and TV shows. And now I can just hear ADR straightaway. And it's just like, they've done this whole scene apart from that guy. That's weird. Why would they not do that? While I'm watching it at the cinema, whereas I was oblivious to it before, like the vast majority majority of the world is, yeah,

Toby Ricketts

I was here that slight shift in tone, just like when I'm listening to audiobooks, and midway through sentence, I'll be like, Oh, that's a different recording day. Because something changes, like the mic position changes and like, and they their position changes and that everything changes. And I'm just like, oh, wow, that was different. Yeah,

Hugh Edwards

you have to have different ears, don't you for this? Yeah. So for me, that's probably the best thing. I also really enjoyed working on an animation this year, called jolt, which is just out, which is just out the film festivals. Now that was great fun. And then, I mean, seeing gravy grow, we're just about to release a great for the brain, Africa, with Emeka, which is going to be great fun. So I'm really pleased about that. And I have to say, one voice Conference USA was a real highlight for me this year, because we couldn't go last year. And it was, so it was the first one that I went to last year was just insane, because the US wouldn't let anyone into the country. So we had to send Harry to Mexico for two weeks to then go and run the conference from us, for us remotely, it was hell. So it was really good fun this year to go out there and see, see everyone and interact with everyone it was, it was great fun. For the voice world, the thing I'm most excited about really is speech to speech. I've been involved with that company, sort of behind the scenes, and it's just got so much positive potential for the voice industry. I get sometimes people are a bit freaked out by AI voices, especially because of the the profit capacity and the and the pace that it's going, no one knows where it's going to end up. And personally, I love that kind of chaos. Because as I say there's opportunity there but but the speech or speech one is something you can really grab on to and it's it's actors performing. And it's designed to do exactly that. So I think that's going to be great.

Toby Ricketts

And like you say, it's that's such an interesting counterpoint to the, the very strong movement into into the world of like, like everyone I've talked to in real life, the last couple of years, I've asked them about the changes that have happened the industry in terms of diversity in terms of like representation on screen and that kind of thing, and how that there have been historical wrongs where where, you know, the wrong people were hired to perform something. And this does throw this really strange shaped spanner in the works in terms of like, it's now just about performance. And you just harm performance. It doesn't actually matter what you sound like, which is it's almost like a counterpoint to that, to that the pull of that to one way and to the other way. So yeah, I find it very interesting.

Hugh Edwards

Yeah, I would say on that note, just as a quick tip for everybody out there with your voice contracts, and hands up everybody who is using a voice contract in every job they do. As I asked a conference the other day, and I and two people out of 100 put their hands up. So firstly, make sure you are. But in those voice contracts, you should be saying for every type of job you have now that your voice may not be used for any inclusion in future TTS, or speech to speech or any synthetic voice models whatsoever in the history of the future without my consent, because, theoretically, if you've done an audio book for someone in the past, and you haven't got that, they can then just go and create a model from it obviously own the rights to that one. Yeah, so the text, they've got the voice, text, they've got the speech, they can do great model with that. Can you absolutely for now. So just start putting it in your contracts? Good idea. Something you need to do. Yeah, that's, that's

Toby Ricketts

a very good idea. Absolutely. Is it better to be a voice artist today? or 20 years ago? Yeah, I thought I thought there was.

Hugh Edwards

No. You said yes or no. But then, then oh, now? I think it's just different. You know, I mean, the everything's a bit rose tinted, isn't it? You know, I mean, I remember sort of thinking when I was younger God, I wish I was sort of born in the 60s so that I would have been around in the 70s. And then I, then I would have been a rock star. You know what I mean? Yeah. Because it's just like to flooded now, and all this crap that you come up with when you're in your teens, and you're failing. So, yeah, I mean, okay, it was good. 20 years ago. But again, you had to be brilliant. And it was difficult, because you were driving all the way around the country, you know, to radio stations everywhere. So you didn't get to see your family as much. There wasn't anywhere near as much voice work in the market. So yes, there wasn't as many voice artists. Yeah, they weren't p2p sites. But there's so much more than eight so higher. Yeah. But then, you know, I mean, I still know people who are six, seven figure earners now, you know, and that's, that's not a lie. That's true. Yeah. So you just got to be good at? Yeah, so six openings still applies,

Toby Ricketts

those six or seven earners can now rock up to their home studio, in their pajamas. And, like work for about a quarter of the time that they would have had to before?

Hugh Edwards

Exam? Yeah. In your pants now, and we wouldn't even know exactly,

Toby Ricketts

yeah, I'll leave you to, to just, you know, do on their own for that. And the fact that I it's just amazing how the how the walls are falling down around, you know, where you have to be like, you know, geographically and I'm in the middle of the New Zealand jungle. And like, I still do all this work. And and yeah, I love that about that. It's it has democratized and a bunch of ways the industry.

Hugh Edwards

Absolutely. I mean, there are all that many positives of from the pandemic, but one positive for our industry is that it is exactly done that it's taught, or it's forced companies to understand that it's okay, and that we've invested and we sound good at home. Yeah. And that you don't need to go and pay a studio. And on that note, charge studio fees people, because very few people are

Toby Ricketts

like, Well, yeah, it's one of those things now that you can put it on a

Hugh Edwards

line item in an invoice and say, here's the 100 is a 200 pound for my voice. Here's the 50 pound usage. And here's the three hours 50 pound studio that I did. Okay.

Toby Ricketts

And yeah, so that's what they'll do. Yeah. Unless you've gone for on those auditions that said, you know, client will use complimentary studio.

Hugh Edwards

Yeah, who does that? Who writes client will give me that studio for free on an audition.

Toby Ricketts

Cool. Well, I have covered I think just about everything on my list. Is there anything that we haven't talked about that that you wanted to talk about?

Hugh Edwards

Well, look at that nice little row of One Voice Awards. I've just realized you. Behind you one. Yes,

Toby Ricketts

yes. Above the whiskey.

Hugh Edwards

For all Toby when Toby started working for us. He wasn't then allowed to work to enter into the One Voice Awards anymore.

Toby Ricketts

It's such a shame. Even check the terms and conditions for the Vox awards the other day, but damn, I can't do that either. Sorry, right.

Hugh Edwards

It wouldn't be cool. Thank you very much for having me on. i It's lovely to be on Oceania for once

Toby Ricketts

again. Absolutely. Um, what is what's planned for Christmas? It's coming up very soon sooner than I thought it was.

Hugh Edwards

is ridiculous, isn't it? So Christmas is going to be a very small affair. My children are Christmas evening with their mother for Christmas Eve and I've got on Christmas Day. I think Gareth program is going to come over some lunch and it's going to be a very intimate small sober affair. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

I bet you'd be the best they really can. Yeah, especially in the winter of the I kind of miss I do miss a British winter Christmas because

Hugh Edwards

very cold here over here six Italy. Freely cheese.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Now it's it got up to about 30 here today. So yeah, some comparison I can use. So I got to the beach on Christmas Day, I think. But yeah, I'm really looking forward to seeing you all over there in May for the one was conference and One Voice Award. Absolutely. Yeah, I've already booked my tickets. So I am given. Yeah, but we'll talk more about that because of the time.

Hugh Edwards

Indeed, indeed. Well, thank you very much for having me on. I really appreciate it.

Toby Ricketts

Thank you very much for for coming on. It's been great. Take care everyone.

Amy Walker - Accent Expert Extraordinaire!

I sit down with arguably the best accent specialist in the world, Amy Walker from 21Accents, to find out what makes accents tick…Why we have accents… The best way to learn accents… Plus a whole lot of fun along the way!

Here is Amy's Video we reference: The Quantum Physics of Accents: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qKPVrZa_z48

Find out more about Amy and learn an accent with her at www.21Accents.com or watch her channel @21 Accents

Here is a transcript of the interview:

Toby Ricketts

Hi welcome to VO life. Today, we're really excited to have an accent expert on the podcast, Amy Walker, who I consider to be the finest Accentologist the world has ever seen as well as being incredibly talented and beautiful. And she's on the podcast right now. Hello, Amy.

Amy Walker

Hello. Wow, that was that was maybe my favorite little intro ever!

Toby Ricketts

Good. I aim to please. We should warn the viewers that it's quite possible that we're going to be slipping into a lot of different accents today. Because that is kind of the point of this interview is to show just how amazing you are at accents and just explore the entire world of accents, which I I've been fascinated with for as long as I can remember. And I'm sure like you have as well. Take us back to like when you first like realized that there were accents and that you could kind of sponge them up?

Amy Walker

Yes, yes, the sponge days. They're still I'm still a sponge. Probably watching Mary Poppins. And just my brain. I remember laying in bed at night. And my brain would be going over, you know, Ellen's lines. She for those who maybe haven't watched it quite as many hundreds of times as I have. She was the the maid. Yeah, like the one who would take care of the children. And it wasn't really her job to take care of the children, but she would anyway. And so like the difference between how she would talk and how Mary would talk and how the cook would talk. And she'd say things like, you don't underline critical to them, too. Yeah, you know, I found there was a banging around the cage. And I was like, What is she saying? They look like words, people apparently understand what she's saying. And I would just roll those things around in my head. And I would remember the shapes of them. And especially what was really helpful is when I would watch musicals, and there were lyrics, you know, because then I go, Oh, I know this word, something, something something and it would rhyme with that. So then I would be figuring out what the words were. And then from there, I would go. Okay, so that's how we say it. If we're from there, or you know, Mary says, HD to the system pool. And I'm like, okay, so it's not St Paul's, but you know, some pools. So then I would just, like log those things away. And I guess by virtue of her being there, and not everybody in that show sounding the same. Last year, did Van Dyck

Toby Ricketts

bring it up? I was gonna bring it up, because it's so funny that we first learned on Mary Poppins because like the number one worst accent of all time, of course, appears Dick Van Dyke has just beautiful rendition of a Cockney accent, which is so bad, it is actually good. Like, it's an accent all unto itself.

Amy Walker

All unto itself. And, you know, they didn't give people the tools. Then this is pre YouTube. Yeah. I mean, I, they probably what did they film it in England? But like they just was, you know, your Dick van Dike - Go ACT!

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, go back to go go. Like that's what he he is when he is a Cockney accent, which I think is fascinating. And strange. He brought me problems because I didn't even remember the maid or that she had a different accent. Possibly, because I grew up in the UK and British TV was kind of full of different accents. Like to certain extent there was like that, you know, I know BBC had a lot of work going on in Birmingham and a lot and all around the north and the south. And so there was always this kind of accent variety. Whereas I guess it's kind of different in the US where there's like, standard American, and it's, it's that all you get on TV pretty much in America.

Amy Walker

I mean, when I was growing up, yeah. Yeah. Unless it's a character piece or a Disney, you know, or a villain. But it was, it was just mostly and they didn't even call it standard American is if there is such a thing that it would just be like, no accent as if somebody could not have an accent. And then other people had accents. So you know.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, I still get in there. Yeah, there's there's still so many briefs that come through from my US agents calling for an American accent. They just say no accent, but don't even say that American accent but like, you know, standard or GenAM as it's now known as but that it's still kind of a hangover from the days of like, oh, you're on screen. Well, you know, you're this kind of vanilla flavored. Kind of California like California accent la accent feels like it's the standard American accent right?

Amy Walker

Up. Okay, so there will be contention about this. In my world, since mostly it's the world of film and Have you no entertainment? Then I would say, Yeah, most of the examples that we're going to have of a general American are going to be from California and are going to be that accent. So there are mild differences. But you know, in a Midwest, so initially it was based out after two white guys in Ohio. There are some mild differences there to hear. But I would say the last like several decades, it's really more more of a callback, not like a necessarily an uptick California, like this kind of thing. But, but those shapes.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. And it's yeah, it's just like, while you're sort of going through the different states in America, I was thinking back to like one of those, those American accents that was just for TV, which was the Mid Atlantic, like the kind of newsreel stuff that it was like, wow, the ships arriving on the car, that's our dardardar, like, there's that news really kind of voice which kind of had it set right in between those two things. And, and, but it's interesting that that that accent kind of faded fell out of favor. And now when you do that kind of accent like this, it really places it in time, as well as space, you know, and I feel like there will be more examples of that, throughout the ages of like, where a specific accent was used a lot.

Amy Walker

Oh, yeah, time periods. Absolutely have accents. Absolutely. The 70s Nobody talks like that anymore. You know, when you watch some Spike Lee or like Scorsese, or, you know, when you watch some things from or Saturday Night Fever. Nobody talks like that anymore. They're just certain it's not even just jargon. But it's just there's like a, there's a tambor difference, there's a vibe, like when we color grade film, it was the vibe, when we color grade film. And we're like, these are the tones of this era. It's the same thing with voices and you hear it in singing. Totally, you know, there are different styles or different harmonies, different shapes, you know, the 90s. You can pick those those particular flavors. So, as actors when we're playing those eras, if we don't tune into that, to me, we're doing a disservice because we're we're bringing in ways of talking that didn't exist, then.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, yeah, that's very true, isn't it? It's an it's like a state of mind at the time that that comes through in the voice like everything does. I mean, that's the thing when, you know, you've taught a lot of people to use their voice as have I. And this thing about like, your authentic voice, or at least like finding your authentic voice, so that you can then change it and like, adopt other things. But it's like how you're feeling at the time. And how your state of mind is, is so crucial and kind of delivering certain things. Yeah, that's interesting. Speaking of, you know, how you feel authenticity, etc. You've just come back from Washington, DC, where you and when you filmed, or at least by you tell us about it. It's called the quantum accents, right? You've got this new video out, which I've just watched, and it's fantastic. It's about stereotypes, conditioning, code switching. Tell us a little bit about this project and kind of how it came about.

Amy Walker

Hmm, thank you. Yeah, the quantum physics of accents is. So this, I was invited by a wonderful museum in Washington, DC called Planet word, it's brand new. And they, they had this gala opening planned in 2020.

Toby Ricketts

Wow,

Amy Walker

didn't get to happen until, you know, October of 2022. So fortunately, for me, that meant that they found me and wanted to bring me in to perform something and I was asked to serve requests, I get a lot, do a bunch of accents. Like, I know what that means to you. And with like, I mean, it's with total respect, because their mission at that museum is absolutely my mission also, which is diving into what makes language language and communication and authentic communication and honoring all the different languages and ways that people communicate. So, but I hadn't been there yet. And so it was like, they wanted me to kind of do a tour of accents or maybe show people how to do accents or something. But I like to do something that has some Pith and juice dives into some places. So okay, I can make something. Some purpose. So unfortunately, I had some months and I just started rolling this idea around and, and working with it and building it and we're, of course I do do those different accents and, you know, get to explore some different things, but it's so that we can dive into that journey together and hold that space together and really Go to some, some shady places and some fun places and yeah, some

Toby Ricketts

more about harboring Well, yeah, I found it very mind altering, I'd say and and just the way that you, you bring about this, this whole thing about accents, and we've been familiar with it our whole lives and television and things has, has definitely, like used this idea of sort of, you know, touchstones and stereotypes a bit sort of too much like to some harm, and, you know, people have have have found their differences a lot easier than similarities in the past. But I feel like that is like we are on this the crest of this change at the moment where, like, attitudes are changing to exactly this kind of thing, like how people are perceived through their accent. But you're saying it's like, an exciting time to be in the space? It is, it is. Yeah. So on that note, like, are you concerned, like this has come from a position of being concerned over the last sort of two or three years, you know, we had in the voiceover world, we have the Simpsons voices sort of coming under fire and admitting that they kind of, you know, they, they regret some of the decisions back when it was kind of okay to do accents that were kind of insulting to people and a culturally appropriating stuff. What's been your journey through that sort of stuff, because as someone that does accents, like we, it's, it's difficult to write the line of, of being able to talk like someone else, and then to do the stereotype and overdo it and, and be unkind, you know, it is a fine line to walk. So how have you sort of navigated that space in your career?

Amy Walker

Yay, important topic. Because it's not just kind of harmful, it's very harmful. And so many different angles. I want to go out with this. So, you know, it wasn't okay. It's just that white people among white people decided that it was okay. Because we weren't paying attention. To what to Yeah, we weren't paying attention. Yeah. So. So, and with VoiceOver nobody sees the actor. So, you know, when I first started in voiceover, I got all kinds of castings. I have even been at a job that I booked for something, you know, for a white character, that then they were like, Oh, can you just do this voice? And I'm like, What? No, you know, and so I started having to say, like, can you do the voice of a black boy? No. So, um, or not even can you just like, oh, and then you can do this, this character, also, because we booked you for the whole four hours. So I had to start just being really clear, also, with my reps, like when I turn something down, saying, I'm not turning this down because of this, and this. And, you know, because that job should go to a person than out one of the bazillion brilliant actors of that actual ethnicity. So, so I think, like, with more people speaking out and more listening, this going on in the industry, it is changing, you know, I definitely see more breakdowns that that just state the ethnicity and, you know, we get a lot of sometimes it's still really confusing, where they'll say, open to any ethnicity, but you kind of get it feeling like the reference that they're choosing or like Rashida Jones, do you think it well, so? Is it a texture thing, like they'll say, it's a texture thing, but I'll just, if I feel like I know what they want, and what they want is not light me, then I will just not. So it is something that's very, very important, especially for white people that we're not, you know, anytime I do an accent at all, it is with compassion. It's never to, to make fun of anybody. It's to. It's like, it's with so much love and wanting to feel what it feels like to be different, you know, to be from different lands. And, you know, that's why we act, right?

Toby Ricketts

Exactly.

Amy Walker

So, but I definitely have increased in my sensitivity over the years to in realizing more of the impact of even when my intentions are loving, that just - still what I represent. And and because of the history of so much harm, that it the intent and the impact, don't equate. Yeah, so I just I'm very intentional about which accents I do.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, it's fantastic. And I think you're right that it does, like you know, it's coming back to like imitation is the highest form of flattery. It's like I want to do your accent to really feel You know how it feels my mouth? And because I love the sounds that that you know, that you make when you talk. But Yeah, doing it for the right reasons I think is so important. Speaking about sort of, you know, you know, adopting, you know, accents that that people have from from other cultures and stuff, do you think some people are naturally better at some accents adopting others because I've, I've always found that when I've been around people with strong accents, I will just start to do it, like almost involuntarily. And, but when I've tried to teach accent to some people, some people like my, my sister, for example, who also grew up in the UK moved to New Zealand, she's still sounds like she got off the boat yesterday, she doesn't even hear the fact that she has a different accent. And everyone's sort of talking differently. And it's a bit of a spectrum, I think in between that, that there are the total sponges. But when you sort of, you know, teaching people, do you think some people are naturally just just pick it up quicker than others?

Amy Walker

Yeah, I mean, I think it's, there's a cross section of natural and practice, for sure. We all those of us who are hearing are all growing up little sponges. And so we first learned to sound very much like the like, who were hearing, in my experience. What happens even with people who say that they're tone deaf, and we're working on singing, I know they're not tone deaf, because they would not sense when they talk. If they were tone deaf. We are very specific, very specific data in how we talk, you know, just those those particular melodies me. And if I go, you know, what I'm saying just from that tune, all right. All right. And like those intervals, if they actually were deaf of tone, they would not be able to hit those exact intervals. So that means to me that there's some interference in how they're listening and what they're allowing themselves to do. So perhaps they were told to be quiet, perhaps they were told that they can't sing, or that they sound bad or something. And so different things can happen. Sometimes. People turn off a part of that hearing, and then just like, start going and sing more, or sometimes they get quieter. And sometimes the ones that just go and they go like, well, we're going up. So I'll just go up in some way. It's like that side of perfectionism that, that will just do something and get it out there and be like, well, I couldn't, I couldn't be perfect, because because I can't pay attention to it, because I don't have time. And on the other side of that it can be so so much focus and so much constriction, that then there's another piece of it that they're not listening to. So the fascinating thing for me and why I love coaching is because it's just about opening into what is what are what doors need opening in the brain of this person who grew up doing this thing where we just sponge and repeat.

Toby Ricketts

Absolutely, yeah. And, yeah, it's interesting to find those kinds of trapdoors, or those, those things that, that do free people, because like, it's amazing when you give people permission, sometimes people don't even know they need to be given permission to do something, and they don't even know it's an option until you say like, I love my one of my art friends, we used to just like muck around with, you know, roleplay and stuff. And there was this really sort of quiet girl, and he was like, you know, what do you think the loudest sound you could possibly make us like, just give someone permission in a quiet room. And just like, you know, with soundproofing, you just say, We're gonna, like make the loudest noise you've ever made in your life here. And just like the ability to just shout and make noise is so freeing. And you realize this lets you do this at any time, it would have implications sometimes, and it may not be appropriate. But you can do it like it's, yeah, I think the same goes with, with with accents. I still even though I do accents professionally, like for a living, I still feel embarrassed when I go to parties and people or website, people say, Well, what do you do? And I say it, you know, to voiceovers and all these different accents, and they say, oh, and then and I'm like, Oh, you don't want to you know, I don't want to do I don't want to do it. And it's just like, it's, it's still something inside me that says like, that's not how you talk, like, Oh, what if What, if anything is really bad, or like, you know, all those kinds of voices. So quelling those voices is a big part of the of the journey. What what are some of the other sort of processes do you have for learning accents? And you've got a few different tools in your box?

Amy Walker

What do you do? I do. Um, I really wanted to add a note on to what you were saying about the previous question. Yeah. Because I didn't get to that part about the, about the work. So there's that part of that about maybe having a facility maybe having an interest in wanting to do that more and wanting to explore it more, maybe having a musical ear, and then there's putting in the time because, you know, and you know, from living in another country, I moved to Australia, and I could have just kept my American accent but it made a lot more sense. That's me to not. But even prior to that all every play I did as a kid, I was working on some kind of an accent because I knew to me this is part of my job as an actor. So, and then you got to test that out, right? You got to go to a shop. And then when they say, Can I help you say, yes, thank you, I'm looking for a cardigan or something, you know, and you get so much better service. But then you meet someone actually from England. And then you get tested even more. So, you know, living in Australia. Where there Ozzy, so if something sounds different, I will No, because there will be like a. And then when you get to like for me, it was about three days where they'd say, like when I was at uni, and if they were talking about how growing up in Sydney, or growing up in Melbourne or something like that. And I was and they'd say, Oh, yeah, did you know was it Sydney for you? And I'd say, oh, no, from Seattle. But you don't have an accent. So then you know that you're, what you're doing is working?

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, yeah, absolutely. And like I say to my students, if you ever really want like, if you feel like you're kind of getting confident with an accent, then just go out to a different restaurant or pub for an evening and just method it out. Like just adopt that character. And it's like, it's the most like, adrenaline infused thing you can do. I remember even just ordering pizza, when I went to the States, for the first time was just like picking up the phone and going, oh, yeah, I want to order a pizza. And it was just like, oh my god, what if they know what if they know? And then you realize it's like, even people from America speak differently. And even if it's wrong, they'll just be like, Oh, this guy's from a weird part of the US or something? Like, it's it's so funny when you get into that. But there's mind games and, and yeah, doing the whole method thing where you just, you know, you put yourself out there and there was a risk of failure, then because you're like, if they realize that you're you've that wasn't quite right, then like, there's this social cost, you know, of you have been going and you have to explain and you're like, oh, actually, I'm just from New Zealand, I was just trying an American accent. And, yeah, that's, it's a great way to do

Amy Walker

you have to you have to be able to do it with that kind of pressure, or you won't be able to do it. That you want.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, yeah. Speaking of another question that actually came up from a conversation I had with a buddy Scott tunnocks, who's a British voiceover artist over in the UK, and we were talking about why the further you get from your own accent, like, the easier it is to act like you can, you can put on this kind of, it's almost like a cloak you can put on and then like, it allows you to kind of get into the role, as long as you kind of know that accent quite a little quite a bit, then you can, you know, it allows you to kind of, you know, go a bit further than you then just using your normal voice like that. So if you ever had an experience with that, where the further you go, the easier it is to kind of get crazy on a character.

Amy Walker

I think it takes us back to permission. Yeah, so if we, by giving ourselves permission to be someone quite different, we allow ourselves because we're not actually a different person. You bits in the kaleidoscope, you're just mixing them around in a different configuration. So I think like when I realized that, that was the biggest freeing moment for me of like, Oh, I'm actually initially when I was a kid, I wanted to be different people. But you're really not. And so there's something about that, that freed things up in my life as well. But then also like great, well, then I can go anywhere. And I think I mean, I'm probably more interested in characters that have a different life experience than than mine just because I'm living this one. But in terms of freedom I think it's it's I don't know if I felt more free or less free in any particular role. It's just about being completely inside it. Like what how do you I guess I guess there's a spectrum of distance between this accent and the other accents, but

Toby Ricketts

yeah, yeah. Yeah. Because that's true, isn't it? Because yeah, it's not it's not a linear spectrum. It's a spectrum with all these different points. Like yeah about with all you know, with like, I've always tried to come up with this kind of like a color wheel for accents. Right? Where because like, it's really okay, if you take American you take British and you take Australian and New Zealand that the vows in Australian are closer to American vows. And the New Zealand are closer to British. So that is it's kind of a spectrum like for certain words, not all words, but Got it? Yeah, yeah, like so. I'm kind of fascinated. I'd love to can't let it come up with a color because the other really interesting thing is that some accents especially like New Zealand and South Africa have lots but and and Boston have have direct correlates that go right through so someone from Boston will say something. I can't think of one right now. Can't count can't can't, they'll say count can't. And we didn't New Zealand say count as well. And so like sometimes, like when you're watching something with a strong Boston accent, it's your brain just goes well, he just like spoke with a New Zealand accent for a second. Ah, yeah, and because there's there's just these like little portals through to that, like I that's exactly the way I say that and my accent. And like, there's some really interesting ones around the world. Like the fact that like a really heavy Welsh accent sounds a lot like a an Indian accent. Very similar. Very similar pattern. Yeah. And it's really easy to spill over from one end to the other, like to get that kind of that pollution that comes through. And I mean, and obviously things that are geographically close have similar things like my Scottish and Irish always gets, like quite confused, it's very easy to spill over from one end to the other. We should work on that. On the accent, we'll the Color Wheel of accents and see which vowels are shared and which aren't. Yeah,

Amy Walker

I wonder if somebody's probably done it. Maybe not. Get on it, Toby.

Toby Ricketts

I can own this space. You do a lot of accents. But you must have one that you enjoy doing more than others do you?

Amy Walker

Favorite everyone always asked to revive it. Um, it just depends on what mood I'm in. You know, sometimes, like, I don't know, I just like every, every script, every scene I ever do. I do one pass with just like Brooklyn, you know, one passed, just like something from New York, because there's something gonna come out that I'm going to fight for hada that I'm just gonna say and not like pussyfoot around, I'm just gonna say it. And so I want I want like that passed, which I'm not going to do but it's like, it's like a layer of paint, I just want to know, is there right? And then I also like a Scottish past as well, because it's quite different. So when you're working a scene, and you get into a few little partner, and then you do a Scottish person, it's completely differently. It's totally gonna break up all those patterns, you see, because our rhythms different the melodies, different, all of that stuff. So I like to do those things and kind of break it up. But favorites is kind of a mood thing. I really like Australian.

Toby Ricketts

mean, it reminds you of a time in your life. You know, these some of these accents can fly again, with permission. Can like if you've got that character, like your Brooklyn one, it's called Big and bombastic. You know, so unapologetic, and, like, I like how, like you allow yourself to do different things with different accents. You know? So maybe that's, that's such a great technique of using different accents to find a different truth in scripts, you know, to find a different power, like poetry around it, or Yeah, or some other truth. That's a really interesting idea. I love it. I love it.

Amy Walker

I suppose most natural for me is usually in English. Yes. The great tingling around the house. And yeah, yeah, exactly. It's so many layers in there of what's said and what's not fed and what's implied.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. But do you ever get stuck in the neck sense, because when I tend to break out my South African accents, I sometimes get stuck. And then everything in my head, my internal monologue starts to turn into South African men. And I find it a bit strange.

Amy Walker

I think I when I lived in a little village, in, in western Washington when I was 16. And there were a lot of people there from from Wisconsin and Minnesota. And they'd say talking about, we're talking about it. And that is a sticky phrase. So I'd be talking completely normally, normally, I'm gonna erase that I would be talking like my self that I sounded like at the time, it was very much like myself now but maybe a little higher. And then I'd say yeah, and then we were talking about it. Or sometimes after I lived in Wellington, I would come home and it was I would just say yes, and they say are you saying yeast? Word?

Toby Ricketts

Yes, yes, yes, of course. I mean, the New Zealand I you know, funnily enough within your New Zealand accent like that was the moment when I was like, this lady knows what she's talking about. Because I have come across so few people doing accents online, who can do an actual New Zealand accent because like, it's such a, like, you hear from people who are trying to learn accents that it's like it's the craziest accent as well. To all over the place, and sometimes they really flit in like, just just like the whole mouth position is really, really interesting. But it seems to like be really popular in the states like Flight of the Conchords. There's Taika Waititi doing his thing with Korg. And just this beautiful understated New Zealand humor that seems to be subtly permeating like the American scene. And it kind of comes back to the accent in a way because it's so unusual. And so kind of flat and kind of like not sure of itself. And we all like go up at the end of every sentence. Which which, which is really interesting. Can you talk a little bit about the New Zealand accent? I liked your story about the the phone card that you tell him the quantum physics video. What was your journey?

Amy Walker

Honestly? I tend to put my pen in the phone booth.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. Yeah. Yeah. What was your journey with an accent? You moved to Wellington?

Amy Walker

I did. I moved to Wellington from Wollongong, Australia. So I, unfortunately, had gotten a tainted view from my beloved Aziz Olivia. But like so there's a you know, there's a bit of a rivalry, I would say, between like, we invented the path. Taliban,

Toby Ricketts

they steal every good thing we have. Like, yeah.

The Taliban so much inhuman, irrelevant.

Amy Walker

So much. So yeah, so I was there. And it took away moment, because I wasn't like, in at uni in Australia, I was around people all the time. In New Zealand, I was looking for a place to live. I couldn't work. So it wasn't I wasn't as immersed. And I came in with a bit of didn't realize I came up with a bit of judgment. So about a couple of weeks in I was like, what's going on? Why aren't you picking those up? And so I think there was a an add on at the time. PHMSA. And it was like it was it has so much apptech Like aggressive apptech that I kind of like I started to just love like, There's something so genuine and sweet that I experience from a New Zealand accent. That's like, you have to come into any interaction like whether you're just buying coffee. You have to have what I what I lovingly termed an arsenal of pleasantries, because you can't just walk up and say you're a black, a black, white, you have to say, Oh, hi, how are you? I'm good. How are you? I'd like to order something. I'm okay. What do you like to order a coffee? Okay, what sort of coffee? Would you like? Oh, I lovely. Would you like and it's just like 18 steps?

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, yeah, exactly. And each one of us has to be like, is it okay? Is it okay? If I have a flat? Oh, no, no, no.

Amy Walker

Okay. Oh, sweet. Wonderful. Sweet is quite sweet. But I realized that I didn't take a full breath in.

And so after about a year and a half the difference between it just being okay to be you and say what you want to say, I realized I was in my nervous system, which is not bad. It was just something that started to feel less authentic for me and how I wanted to be in my body. Which isn't to say that I couldn't find a way to do that. And to have a kiwi accent. I just found that. For me. That was my experience of it was more sort of this sort of energy in that way.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. So talking about because we've been, you know, you've been swapping in between accents. And it's kind of your thing that you just like bang, bang, bang, go between them, especially in a want to talk about your, your chasing X sensors with Jim measurement, which is fantastic. But like, what do you what tools do you use to switch between them as like? I'll ask it won't give examples. How would you treat them so easily?

Amy Walker

Ah, it because I burned through the hard part. But when I was at this, just random idea back in this little website called YouTube long ago before it was Google before there were channels before there were ads. I was a struggling actress in Philly. Trying to figure out how to let casting directors know that I could do you know if it wasn't an accent that I could already do? I would learn it And you know, be able to do it. So I thought, why don't I just make a little video where I introduce myself in 21 different accents and a single take sounds like a catchy number. And so what? This whole idea, but the switching and I knew that switching was the hardest part. And so and I intentionally put accents together, like next to each other, like Australia, to Kiwi to Australia, and like, Irish to Scottish because I knew that's the hardest part, like anyone can take their time and get into the zone and come up and do an accent and then cut and then get into the zone and then cut. And if you find like a lot of the videos that happened after that there are cuts, you know, there's still it's still rare to see somebody not cut at all. So I just kind of knew intuitively that that was the hard part. So I spent a lot of time practicing. Where did those things live in my mouth? Sometimes when they're new, you know, some people have like a particular line. And sometimes I've used that the moment. Yeah, yeah. Or like, or a little line from a movie or something little I'm your uncle Argyle that will get me there straightaway. So if I spend a wee moment I might do that. Or I might you know, something, or

want to be a pair. I don't like crazy. We mustn't panic, we mustn't panic.

So, um, have your little ones, that'll get you there. But then at some point, you have to it's just the practice of over and over and over. So that you don't have to, like have a little screensaver moment where you're doing the line secretly in your head before you can jump. Yeah, it's worth it because it's rare.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, and I feel like you've got to initiate that muscle memory that happens in your head. That's just like, like, like driving I was compared to driving. I mean, like driving is an insanely complex series of things. There's so much going on. There's brakes, pedals, clutches, gears, children music on the radio, other road users and yet we just like sail through it, because we've been doing it for so long. And I feel like it's the same with accents that you you learn all the gears and and all the different stuff. And then once you've committed that to kind of like your motor cortex and your and all the parts of your brain that that likes doing that subconsciously you can think about the acting and the performance and the music and all the things that you know we do when we're speaking in our most comfortable way of speaking. So like do you do you have committed there's still some accent where you feel like there's still a bit of horsepower going into the accent?

Amy Walker

Sure, I would there are plenty that I haven't really learned all the way because I never get them you know, I mean, I don't I don't have breakdowns for them. So or like maybe I've had one ever and so I'll learn it up for that and and then like that RAM is gone. So yeah, definitely. The ones that I keep are the ones that I

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, absolutely. And you have a kind of a like, Do you believe in the kind of the masculine that you've put on the mask? I know that's a big thing in enacting of putting on the mask but like, were you? Yeah, like like more about where you feel in your mouth and then your body language your body comes into it as well to remember Excellent.

Amy Walker

Oh, yeah, it should start in the body because it's coming from this pinball machine, you know, ricocheting off all these trot traumas and sore spots and desires and things so you know, we want it to be free and connected we don't want it to sound from the head up like you're thinking it we want it to feel really organic. So

Toby Ricketts

what was completely forgotten the body and I've lost it yes, we can quickly move on obviously, I think you I think you did answer a and I think I wanted to talk about was like an English as a Second Language accents, which like I've I've never really been good at like doing different like French accents. German so when the person is not actually speaking, like with their native tongue is not it's not it's not English. And so it's their it's the effect of their spoken language that is affecting the way they speak English. Do you have a different way of learning those accents because I really struggle with with with with different European accents and making them different enough without being making them offensive, you know, learning those different tropes.

Amy Walker

So the important thing for me is that this person is trying to speak correctly. No, they are trying their best to be understood to pronounce the sounds the best they can Okay. So you have to have some kind of an understanding of the language itself. To know when this person looks at these letters. What is their first thought the first thought is O th To know that it's the, you know, oh, I know that it's, you know, and or ah, or E instead of F, or, you know, so when you when you are coming from it from the place of first understanding how that person would say those letters in their language in French, for example. And then as, as I'm listening to my references, then, which for anything, and we can get, I haven't forgotten that question about how to learn accents. So, for anything, the references are the most important. And I like to get video whenever possible, because I want to see how they're how they're holding their body, I want to see how their, what their mouth is doing, what their tongue is doing. You know, all that is important information. And of course, you need audio. And then it has to be very authentic. Because there are little little bitty bitty things that would that you need analog that can be lost in translation, it's wonderful to have a coach who can teach you how to pay attention to things that that you're missing. But for me, for the most part, I'm soaking things up on all these subtle levels that I can't like, it's rare to trust that somebody else has gotten all those levels. For me, there are a few people that I that I'll work with, when I have an accent that I need to get for something. But yeah, I need to trust that I'm getting all the little subtle information to. So then, when you're watching somebody, if possible, watch them speak in their native language, also. So you can see oh, this is out there, though, the mouth is a little bit forward for the tongue, you know, for the lips as well. And then what are the melodic patterns? The youth? You know, you know, what are the different melodic patterns that they're using in their native language? What translates in? How do they even interpret what our patterns are? Because sometimes they're right on and sometimes they're a little interesting. Where do they place the emphasis on those syllables? Because again, it's, they're doing their best to speak that language. In, you know, in American English, if they're, if it's for American or British English, which is another thing. So if I'm doing a French person, depending on the project, I will often skew British English because that would be more likely, unless it's a project where it needs to skew American English. So that's, that's kind of the first question. And then, it's really important to not go, oh, well, French people can't say th the same way. So it's always going to be z. So every time they do this, it will be this, this, this is an all you can hear when you're listening to them is zero, this is no, they see that that's a th, they probably learned for this amount of time in school or wherever they learned it, that it's or the and they're doing their best. And sometimes they might say these and get it, you know, pretty well, it might take a little more effort. And sometimes they might not. Like I said, sometimes they might not. But that one kind of blends in in a way that's not just going to stick out at you. So this is a tiny glimpse into, like I'm paying attention to, what's this going to be like for the listener is anything going to pop out and be maybe correct for that accent, but not understandable enough for this audience. And so if it's not understandable enough, what's something that I can do where maybe it takes a little more effort, but they'll get it closer to the actual sound. And then I'm going from that level of, okay, from that baseline, they're looking at it from this language, and then from like, that particular person, so you get to add in things about you know, their status and, and their loves and how they might really enjoy one particular word. So

Toby Ricketts

Well, I mean, the thing that I've realized in sort of studying accents and trying to get always trying to get better, is how it's like fractals, like the closer you start looking, the more detail appears and the closer you look at that detail, there's more detail all the way down, you know, it's like and then you get to the individual person I know like, like, you know, when I studied with you, just the way that someone speaks with their layers of accents and life experience, etc. And, jeez, that that whole is just as deep as you want to take it, isn't it? Yeah. Unfortunately, absolutely. Like dialectical things are important. You kind of got there with it with the French accent there in terms of there are certain like, when you're especially when you're improving with accents and and or If you're trying to improv around a script, there's certain words, which will authenticate the accent that you're in, you know, certain things that they say in the ER let you sing with Minnesota. Like that. That's that little mnemonic that they have up there and, like cured. Exactly, yeah. So how do you first one I also back up, like when you were saying about, like finding a reference, when you're learning accents, to find these little dialectical quirks and to find these, like quirks, how do you make sure that thing you found is not just someone trying to do an accent because there's so many people on accent on YouTube trying to do accents. Not all of them are as, as technically proficient, as, as yourself. And some of them are sort of like, they kind of put you in the wrong direction a lot of times. So what do you have any, I mean, obviously, you know, what your your sources, but there are other methods that you can use to try and find actual people. Specially, yeah.

Amy Walker

So I love the accent tag on YouTube, because that, for the most part is not actors. I love actors, I am one, but we think about how we sound. So if your reference is an actor, even if it's an interview, they are thinking about how they sound and if they're from somewhere regional, there have their judgments that come with that regionalism. And so they might be softening it or skewing it a little one way or something. So I like just people who were, Hey, I saw this accent tag thing. And so I'm just gonna do it. And you know, I don't care if they have one follower, if they're from that place. And it's been very genuine, what I found, and you have to, you do have to kind of search. But in case you're not familiar, the accent tag is a is a tag where there's a couple of them, where people will say where they're from, and they will read a set of, or the answer, they'll read a set of words and usually answer a set of questions. And then, hopefully, they'll talk a little bit at some point in the video and just be talking about whatever catches their interest. That's the gold for me. Because even then, they're trying to answer it, right? You know, they don't want to be stupid, all the things that that they've get. And so it's interesting to hear how those how they'll say those things. And it's sometimes it's nice to hear the same word or phrase said in reference, because you can say, Oh, I see how that's different. But then the gold is when they're just talking, soak all that up, what's their cadence? What, you know, what are all those bits and pieces. There's the I the IDA, that international dialect of English archive, which is really hit and miss. You can be used to be one of the only and but it's just very rarely, I don't know why they choose the people who choose. Like this person was born here. But then they mostly lived there and then lived here. And then like they it's not usually very precise in terms of like, this is a pure specimen.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. Yeah.

Amy Walker

Or maybe it is, but they they were born and bred in 1950. And nobody talks like that now. So yeah, that's my favorite.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, that's, that's cool. Do you ever for roles or for fun, mix accents, kind of mix them up. Like this is a person who was born here, and then moved to this place? purposefully.

Amy Walker

Um I've heard that. I'm, like, sometimes they'll say, a light accent. And I'll take that to mean the same thing. Or I've had a couple of interesting ones that were like, We don't want a we want a non distinguishable European. Just like, What the heck is that? Or, you know, I'm someone a different species, or a toaster, or an elf, you know? And so we're you where you get to have fun, especially when you're making something up that's like another species. Because then you can take certain sounds from certain things, but then you're having to make sure that you don't ever get into like, this is obviously German, or this is Russian or something like that. Yeah, that's, that's fine. Yeah, I haven't had one. Because it can be really hard for people then if you're mixing things, then usually, their brain would be like, where are they from?

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. Yeah, that's what you just said. And it's, I've definitely found with my mixing my sort of mid atlantic stuff that I do for for like corporations that don't want to sound like they're just American or just British or whatever. Like, it usually lands sort of somewhere in the mid atlantic with maybe a pinch of Ozzy or something. But like, you don't want to sound like you're doing a bad accent. And I feel like there are rules that you learn with each of those accents. And you don't break any of those rules, but you don't sort of commit to any one kind of Val thing like it's it's an interesting kind of process to try and to try and go right we're gonna go like yet like like halfway between kiwi and British there was like an anglicized Kiwi or or or you know halfway between Ozzy and Ozzie and kiwi is kind of interesting because you kind of lose the clarity of those those different handles that you have on the accent. Yeah, that's fantastic. So coming to the end of the interview, is there anything else that we sort of haven't covered in the interview? I do want to talk about your fantastic accent website. 21 accent?

Amy Walker

Yeah, yeah, so the most important thing of all, is recording yourself. When I didn't really straight up answer the question of how do you learn a new accent, but you really can't do it. Unless you record yourself and have any idea how well it's translating what you're doing. So, you know, I definitely video is great, it's nice to have some some passive listening as well, I every time I'm watching a film, I'm also sponging which is great. But when I'm learning a new accent, or I'm doing the voice match, I will take the audio, the sample audio, I will drop that into my, my audio software, whatever that is for the logic, pro what, whatever, GarageBand anything. And then I'll take a little piece, and I'll copy that. And I'll go paste space, paste space, paste space, maybe six or 10 times. And then you need to have times or at least for me the many ways. And this is like when you want to nail it. You know? Listen, repeat, listen, again, repeat, repeat while you're listening or shadow. And so because sometimes you'll hear it's really important to not only shadow, you know, to have times when you're 100% listening, and then you're speaking, but to also shadow because you'll feel oh, they were here, and I was on that note. So all those different pieces, and then you do it again. And then you do it again. But it's it's listening, when you're 100% Listening to what you just did, compared to the sample, that's when you'll really hear oh, no, I thought it was this, but the tone is completely different. And then it's just it's just going through all those layers. That's kind of the basic.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, yeah. And it's, you know, an open when we looked at it, and I did that, that you really do find these a bit like the the fractal thing that you do find these truths in some of the way someone talks that you and you can, it's a funny thing, because you can kind of feel it when you get it right. You're like, Oh, they're that how I moved right then that was it. And that little serotonin kick you that you ban is that's about how we learn, right? It's about when we know that we're doing something, right. That's very useful. It's a very useful topic. So how did 21 exits come about? You want to just give us a potted summary of how you've got it, you've got a collection of excellent teaching experts, including yourself, did they grow out of the success of the YouTube channel?

Amy Walker

It did, yeah. So, so that video that I mentioned, 21 accents, I had a dear friend say, you know, you really should make a website, you should just grab that handle, or that it wasn't handled as a URL. And so I did. And then it just became a lovely, kind of a, what we call an LA a side hustle, you know, to be coaching and keeping myself really sharp and all those tools as an actor and a writer. And then Alex was somebody who I started working with, and through the course of training him over two years, he's from Spain originally. And now he books roles in LA as like the American Pie teenager, like just the All American team. And he loved it so much he wanted to teach also. So it kind of became like a platform, a way for him to teach also, and then other people wanted to teach. And so it became a little house where we can do what we love while we also have four other jobs. And then now we're building a community. It's in beta right now, what we're about to launch in January is all access membership, where people because we, especially after COVID, you know, it's great to get to work one on one and there's nothing like it, but not everybody can afford that. And we wanted to be able to reach more people. So it's a library of the courses and then also weekly workshops where we get to work with more people.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, that's fantastic. I feel like the one of the most useful things It's gravy for the brain. Oceania, which I head up here is that you know is watching other people as well like watching other people have a go you'll learn so much from watching other people learn. And one of my favorite things about teaching I'm sure you find the same is that you you've just learned from every student as well, like every student learns for everyone else. So getting as many Any people on the call is a real bonus. So yeah, look out for that. viewers and listeners. The 21 accent sounds community thing sounds like sounds like it'd be a great place to try out some accents. Good Lord.

Amy Walker

We got several coaches on there. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

I will thank you so much for your time. I hope you enjoy the rest of your evening in the in cold la now.

Amy Walker

Yes. Freezing 53 even. I had my coat on today.

Toby Ricketts

Is it below freezing and Fahrenheit always forget.

Amy Walker

Not even close as I can. my nervous system is outside my body I feel at all.

Toby Ricketts

Wonderful. Okay. Thank you so much for your time.

Amy Walker

Such a pleasure, Toby. Thank you

Interview with 'The Nethervoice' - Paul Strikwerda

Paul Strikwerda AKA The Nethervoice, has decades of experience in broadcasting and voiceover.
His Blog is one of the most read and subscribed-to Voiceover resources on the internet.

Toby Ricketts and Paul chat about many things, including;
His journey into the world of voiceover
How he started blogging and what benefit that has for his voice work
Whether he voices in different accents or languages
The best way for beginner Vos to start in the industry
Why it is important to stand out
The story of his stroke and recovery from it
His thoughts on work / life balance
His opinion of Gravy for the Brain as a company
Voiceover business tips
Why passion in your craft is important
How welcoming and supportive the VO industry is
Technology in the studio, including microphones
His book “Making money in your PJs”
His new book

Stick around until the end of the video for a very generous offer from Paul…
More VO LIFE Interviews in the series: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLZQTBMxKbs3E8C9VwatGYFjHo0wpoAGfK

You can find more info at www.nethervoice.com & Gravy for the brain Oceania: http://oceania.gravyforthebrain.com

Toby Ricketts

Welcome to vo life. My name is Toby Ricketts from gravy for the brain, Oceania. And on this video podcast we talk to the big people in the world of voiceover and entertainment really we've we've had agents, we've had voices. We've had all kinds of people on the podcast movers and shakers. And today's guests certainly does move and shake a lot on the internet, that's for sure. It's Paul Strikwerda. Be very afraid. How are you there? It's very early where you are.

Paul Strikwerda

It is 5am. But I think we should start off by wishing Mel Blanc a very happy birthday. Birthday today.

Unknown Speaker

Very good. How appropriate.

Paul Strikwerda

I was called by Dutch national radio a couple of hours ago. They have a morning show. And they wanted to talk about Mel Blanc. And I said, Why do you want to talk about Mel Blanc today? Was it don't you know said I don't know what? Well, it's his birthday. You should know your voice over? Who is Mel Blanc and why? Why should we talk about involves you called me. And he? He died 33 years ago. But it's pretty amazing. That 33 years later, people in the Netherlands still remember him and want me to talk about him, which is phenomenal.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, it's a testament to sort of like what kind of like how voice artists can touch people really, you know, they can like the voices of all of these characters that they know and love. And it's still like the same these days. We've got videogame characters who just like they'll do one character and then go on, you know, tours for for years on the back of that passion that the fans have.

Paul Strikwerda

I think it's always fascinating. If you stop some people in the street and say, Can you name five Hollywood actors? I think they can rattle them off straightaway, you know, five popular actors. But when you ask them to name one voice actor, there's probably one voice one name that comes up and that's probably Mel Blanc and O'Donnell Fondriest I will draw a blank. That's, that's part of our professional that we're kind of the anonymous disembodied voices that people hear. But they'll know who we are and what we do and stuff like that. But I think it's a big tribute to Mel Blanc. And they asked me, Why do you think he's so popular? I said, Who doesn't love cartoons? You know, you can love or hate your favorite movie star. There's this big Johnny Depp thing going on at the moment of our recording. And some people love him. Some people hate him. But I have never met somebody who hates Mel Blanc are the characters that he voices. So that's pretty unique. And I think there's also a wonderful that we can enjoy someone like malbranque with different generations because I have a daughter, she's 19 I'm 58 my father in law who is 90 years old who lives with us and our favorite pastime together three generations is to watch Looney Tune cartoons. It's all Mel Blanc. That's phenomenal.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Without his voice in there, like those characters just wouldn't have been

Paul Strikwerda

told the interview yesterday. Now. Just imagine watching like Daffy Duck or even Tom and Jerry or Woody Woodpecker. Roadrunner, all his classic cartoons. Turn the sound on, you can't hear anything. What's left of it? It's just images. And it's really it's, it's nothing's left to it. It's not even funny. Yeah. And in those days, I mean, I know you wanted to talk about me. But I think Mel Blanc is more interesting. So let's make this interview of belflex Sorry, people

Toby Ricketts

smell blanks journey through life. To talk more about your journey, of course, people might know you as the nether voice. That's your big your website. You're a prolific blogger and social media, right? So do you want to tell us about like your journey into voice acting, because you've got some sort of strong opinions on sort of, like, you know, training and how people get into voiceover. But how did you

Paul Strikwerda

struggle? gets me into trouble. You're trying to get me into trouble. Every time I voice a strong opinion. I got a big backlash. So let's do it all over again. I think I started like a lot of voice actors did because as a child, I love to imitate people. And that got me into trouble too. Because the first instance that I can remember me imitating somebody rather successfully was the first year of elementary school. And we had a teacher with a very weird voice. So to talk a little bit like Julia Child's, but her name was Mrs. drinkers drinkers. And drunken in Dutch means in Hebrew, ate it drunk, drunk was drunk. So I talked like this. And they said, Well, to me, she sounds like she's only drunk, not knowing that she was just about to come into the classroom, and she said Mr. Strickland, in the corner with you, You troublemaker. And what she did was something that people couldn't do these days anymore, but she took it took a big bandaid, put it over my mouth and I had to stand in The corner for 404 for an hour or so, and everybody laughed at me. Oh, Paul was silly voices. That's my first first appearance, I think, is a voice actor. And it didn't deter me. And I and I, my father was a minister. And I loved imitating him on his pulpit. And he didn't like it either. But nevertheless, I persisted. And I kept on doing that, because I think there's something so fascinating about the voice of voice. It's like a fingerprint. It's completely unique. And I remember doing these, what do you call them? That I was my father and I had this when we were building models. In the days, I'm dating myself now, where models weren't these nice plastic elaborate things that you glue together. But they're a made of cardboard, cardboard, so you had to cut them up and put them together. So I had a whole village of models in my bedroom, put on the shelf, and I invited my family around of the bed, and I had a flashlight and I put the light on the different models. And I started telling the story with about the people living in those houses of what they would sound like what their lives were like. And later on, I did radio plays with an old tape recorder and old Phillips cassette recorder. And I had lots of instruments because also love music and play different instruments, instruments aligned around me for the sound effects. And I have read stories like King Arthur and the Black Knight, or the five or all these famous kids books that reenact them all by me, directed by me voices by Paul stricker voice characterization, as they would say, with Mel Blanc, and all the sound effects. I think that's how I got my start. Now fast forward, the small boy grows up. And it was 17 years old, I was studying musicology are four things in in Holland. And one of my best friends had an uncle who was in the radio business. He was a news and current affairs presenter and he said, My radio station is holding a contest for young kids who want to be involved in youth radio. And then, as sort of a joke of the party, all our friends said, You know what we're going to all apply and properly, nothing will come out of it. But it could be fun, you know, because I was always fascinated by radio voices. And I want to have a look behind the scenes. So if this is an opportunity for me, and maybe I could work for the Costco music department, being a musicologist and stuff like that. So I applied and, much to my surprise, they hired me on the spot to start doing youth radio programs. And one of the benefits was that I was mentored by the people who were the veterans in the business to people that I had grown up with. And it wasn't only radio, it was television, as well. So as of age 17, I was a voice on Dutch radio and later face on Dutch television, can't believe it, this face, but they they wanted me. But later on, we decided that I had a better face for radio, of course. But that's, that's how I got my semi professional start. And then I had another big break, because at that time, the Dutch Army still was was Russia, we had an army of conscripts. I think that's what you call it. And so I had to go, but I didn't feel like going to the army because I'm not a big fan of shooting people with guns. And I became a conscientious objector. So instead, I had to do social service, which is fine by me. And I found a radio and television company that was enlisting. People who wanted to do social service by working for radio and television station isn't that great?

When it was my time to go into the army, I did my social service at that radio and television station. So that gave me another two years of a full time professional experience to do all kinds of things, producing presenting being a roaming reporter every aspect of the radio and television business. And after that, I got myself a free vacation, courtesy of the state of the Netherlands. And I loved it so much that I flunked out of musicology. And I said, this is what I want to do with my life, and it would be in radio. And so that really became the start of it later. Was my voiceover career.

Toby Ricketts

Was there any point like a lot of people where you would sort of doing voice work on the side or it wasn't making up like a majority of your income, and then you thought, like, there's a leap of faith that happens with every voice artist, I think when you get to the point, like it's done as a hobby for enough time, and you think I really want to make a go of this on it, but I don't have the time to apply to it. So you think Well, I'm just gonna do it for six months and see what happens. Was there was there a point at which you reached with that?

Paul Strikwerda

You know, I was done with the whole radio and TV business by the age. I was 38 because I was working in the news and current affairs department. And you know, in most news is not good news. Unfortunately, that's why it's new. Who's and it kind of sickening to have to deal with that every day. So I decided to take a break from broadcasting and got a training as an NLP practitioner that stands for Neuro Linguistic Programming or neuro linguistic psychology. It's the stuff that guys like Tony Robbins teach, you know, you gotta believe in yourself, it's all about changing your mind change your life and helping others to change their mind and their lives as well, which was incredibly powerful, empowering, powerful stuff. And I became a trainer in that methodology. And I was invited by training institute in the United States to become one of the lead teachers. So I made it, my first leap of faith was leaving the Netherlands behind my friends or my family, packing my bags and moving to the United States of America, then joining an institute there. Now, the person who was running the institute that said it was very successful, which in fact, it was not. So while I was there, there wasn't as much work as they said they would offer me and I had to do something on the side of this, you know, this this, I've always loved working with my voice. So let's see if I can do something with my voice and I found an ad in the paper. And as said Mike Lemmon casting Philadelphia is having an open casting call. So well, this could be my opportunity to fame and fortune. I knocked on the door of Mike Levin casting, and Mike Lemmon was the big guy behind the moves of M Night Shyamalan, like the six cents with Haley Joel Osment, when he says I see. Remember that movie. And he's been casting them ever since. So he was a big name in our area. And when I opened the door of his casting agency, there were about 1000 people in the hallway. They all thought they were the next best thing since sliced bread. But most of them are like, like ventriloquist and jugglers and ballet dancers and singers. And there was only one guy who thought he could do voiceovers and it was me. So they looked at my application and said, Oh, voiceover we only have one VoiceOver so I was sent straight to the voiceover director. We had tea and scones and the lovely conversation and she started directing me Give me a few scripts. And she noticed immediately that I know knew how to work a microphone know how to interpret a script, do different voices characters, and she said, You know what, I want you to meet Mike Lemmon. So I did and he worked with me. And they hired me on the spot, basically, because there was no one else I think, but they said, You know, Paul, you sound like unlike anybody else we have in our database of voices because you have this weird European thing going on. And at that time, this was mind you about 23 years ago now. I sounded very British because that's how the Dutch children learn their English, the Queen's English. So sounded like a stuffy Professor all the time is when we whenever we need a stuffy English professor, kind of Attenborough type of guy, URL, man. And that's how I started I started by imitating I think now for a very bad British accent that Americans don't know what accent from the other anyway, so they hired me. And I was hired. I remember my first job was for Hershey parks, which is a big theme park, you know, Hershey chocolates, the most awful chocolates in the world. But nevermind, I they have a theme park like Disney World. It's all about chocolate, of course. And right. And it was the voice of one of the rights that led to many other things. But back to your question five minutes later. interrupt me when when you need to. Okay, please, because I have a tendency to go very on and on even that coffee. But I, I did not quite believe in myself. Because I'm Dutch, just this unknown Dutch guy in the United States. And in Holland, it's very easy to be famous, because there's only 16 or 17 million people in the Netherlands. That's it? Yeah. So in Holland, most people knew who I was. But in the United States, this 250 or 60, or 70 million people there. And nobody knew who I was. Nobody had ever heard of me. Nobody cared, ready. And I, these were in the days where we didn't really have social media. I didn't have website, I had one agent. And just, I didn't want to sit by the phone all the time waiting for the agent to call for another thing. So I wasn't sure whether I could do this or pull this off. And we didn't have home studios either. So it was more of a wait and see game. But then this whole arrangement with the training company, for whom I was going to train people to become NLP practitioners wasn't working out very much. I said, Well, I got to do something on the side, at least to get by. Because otherwise, I might as well go back to Holland. And at that time,

I was in a romantic relationship in the United States. And I didn't want to go back to Holland. So I had to make a choice and said, What am I going to do? I'm going to take this seriously, or will I stay an amateur forever and keep it as a hobby. And some people still think that I should have kept it as a hobby. But I decided note and I'm gonna give this a go. And then my I started my whole publicity campaign all around the nether voice that voice of the Netherlands Paul stricker Look at, look at us now we're talking about it. I'm talking to somebody in New Zealand for things, working for a company called gravy for the brain.

Unknown Speaker

Who thought that crazy idea?

Paul Strikwerda

You got to be crazy to be in this business, don't you? You do,

Toby Ricketts

you've got to kind of I mean, I think your things is exactly right about standing out. Like, there's definitely something to be said for like, the thing that gets you the foot in the door. For me, obviously, like the fact that I was like, I mean, you know, I'm in New Zealand, I'm in the middle of nowhere and rural New Zealand. And that is a good enough reason to give agents a call, because they're like, Wow, that's different. That's, that's kind of, let's get this guy out, you know. And then if you have the talent to back that up, it's gotten you in the door. So it looks like that's definitely worked for me. So I often tell people, it's like, you have to find that that part of yourself that people find like interesting, like an odd stone on the beach, or whatever. And I'm, that's definitely interesting

Paul Strikwerda

students is, you know, what's normal for you, is probably special for someone else. And you don't recognize it, because it's normal. That's why I need someone else to recognize that. And I got a hint, in my short and unglamorous career as a waiter. Yes, I've been a waiter in the United States as well to make ends meet. And frankly, I didn't have a don't tell them what I didn't have a work permit at that time. So and it took years to become a US citizen. And when I finally applied we had 911 and then it took even longer because they didn't want all this foreigners in the country. So I had to do something to make a couple of bucks and I became a waiter. And people love me for some reason because not because who I am but because of the way I sounded. And we had this game where they the the people I was waiting on had to guess where it was frameless if you guess one from our by a free dessert. And, and I did waiting on the side for about two years, which was another life lesson I will eagerly forget. But it was fun too, because you have lots of different people in your restaurant, lots of different personalities, lots of different accent and you learn how to sell stuff, you know, when the kitchen says can you push dish triode free, we need to sell the the chicken today. And so I could talk people into ordering dishes and buying basically more from me than they were willing to spend. So it was an education and selling. And so I am losing my train of soccer wagering making money in United States accents. Getting a work permit helped me out again.

Toby Ricketts

Well, I guess we could fast forward into because I was next thing I was gonna ask you is about like, where? Because you're in the United States. Now. How much of your work? You know, do you are you doing for United States companies? How much is back in Europe? And like, Where does this work come from? It's like, you're kind of all about self generated work. And agents probably come into it as well cuz I know you're represented. And whether you fish in the ptps or not. Occasionally, a fiver maybe?

Paul Strikwerda

Is fiber. Yes. Don't say the word Fiverr. Well, I dabble here on deck because that's one thing. You can't put all your eggs in a basket. Absolutely. in one basket. That's that's never gonna work. And I became a freelancer to be free to be an independent contractor. So I've always been a freelancer by the way, from the very moment I started in radio, I was my one man business. So I had learned how to to drum up my business and to stand out a little bit, if you will. So I have about 12 agents, most of whom I never hear from. And when they when they when they do it, they usually think I'm like Holland and Poland. They think Holland and Poland are the same sort of idea. He Polish scripts, or Pennsylvania Dutch scripts. Boy, you're Dutch. You live in Pennsylvania. So you must be Pennsylvania Dutch. So let's do this in German, German accent and I still can't do it. But so you know, I cannot rely on these things. And to everybody who's watching at the beginning of his or her career. Some people may say, well, once you've got an agent, you have landed and it's true. They gave me my first break. But that will dry out at some point. You cannot rely on your agents because if you do that, then you're pretty much doomed. The only person you can rely on is you know, my wife has this wonderful tile next to her desk it says behind every strong woman is herself which is nice because they say you have behind every strong man is his wife or a woman or something like that. But she says behind every strong moment is herself. I think the hide every strong VoiceOver is him or herself, it's gotta be you, the buck stops where you are, you gotta make a lot of noise, otherwise people won't hear you. It's the whole deal is you're a needle in a ginormous haystack. And what you need to do is make that needle as sharp and shiny as possible, so that you become hard to ignore. And that's what I set out to do. Maybe arrogant at the time, but you know, I had nothing to lose. So I thought, somebody told me that I have a very unique accent. I'm going to leverage that accent, I'm going to make use of that. So I labeled myself I marketed myself as the ultimate European voice was very boisterous, because Holland, the Dutch people are very modest. You don't talk about yourself. So I had to learn how to talk myself up in public,

Unknown Speaker

America is a pretty good place to learn that.

Paul Strikwerda

Oh, my gosh, the United States. That was the hardest thing for me, because everybody said, Paul, Tony, down, I have to tell my Dutch colleagues also, you know, you got to get out of your shell, sell yourself, otherwise, you will not you won't be noticed. Yeah, but what people wear if people think I'm so arrogant, no, no, you're not arrogant. You're just proud of your accomplishments that we need to rephrase the way you think about yourself, the way you sell yourself.

Toby Ricketts

We call that tall poppy syndrome. You know, where the tall poppy is get cut off? Yeah, exactly. True.

Paul Strikwerda

Yeah. So. So I had to learn that. And one of the first things I did was a built a website, I'm not a website builder. So if you would look at my first website today,

you would just pass me by because it was very bare bones. And the only thing that I did that was different at the time was I started blogging. And I always loved to write and stood first started as notes to self really, because I didn't know who I was blogging for writing to if anybody would be interested. But apart from a weird accent, that's something that I think I'm rather good at. So I started documenting my journey. And then, thank goodness, social media started and became a member of a couple of groups. I don't even know if Facebook had started at that time. But there were a couple of groups on the interweb, or about voiceovers, and I started posting links to my blog, and some people read my stuff and commented favorably on it and thought, you know, maybe I'm onto something here. And I've been doing that for the past 1718 years now. And it's grown and grown and grown and grown. And today, I can say that my blog is the landing page of my website, and the single source for my notoriety, if you will. One thing that the Dutch have in common is that they don't mince their words. They're very, they're known throughout the world as being rather blunt. Because they're honest, they don't want to be nasty or rude, but they're just honest. And they like to share their opinion and everybody's got an opinion in Holland and they're not afraid to share that with you. And I didn't know that was made me different because I was just writing as me being blunt about the industry about the the setbacks and all the empty promises that were being made and all these people that pretend that there's something and they're not and you know, there's so much humbug going on and hot air that a lot of Emperor's without clothes. And I thought it was my, my service to the community of voiceovers to expose these embers will have closed and all the hot air that was going on, including hot air about me because I was trying not to take myself too seriously. But somehow, that took off, and I got myself a name. But what this does is once your blog gets a regular amount of viewers, it gets noticed by the Yahoos and the Googles in the world to say, hey, this somebody who does something relevant, apparently something that's interesting, and that people want to check out again and again and again. And again. Because the problem is most websites is that voiceover websites, I mean, is that they're the same. Every day, every month, every year, I had some people that I worked with voice actor websites a lot in there. And they build the greatest websites for voice actors. And once they build a website, then five years later, they get a call and say can you please design another website for you? Because mine is not working? Or why isn't working? Well, nobody's coming? Why is nobody coming? Well, because you didn't change anything. Why would people come back once they visited your site? It's like fish in a fish market here. If you don't change it, it starts to rot. Nobody wants to nobody wants to come back. So that's the great thing. A blogged us if it's done well, I think if it's interesting, you got to be interesting for people to be interested. So every week consistently through thick and thin. And then for better or worse in sickness and health, I've been writing this blog. I'm married to it, as you can tell. And every week, to my astonishment, still, people are coming back for more. And that has given me what they call a domain authority Domain Authority is a number between zero and 100 indicates how popular your website is based on the number of backlinks. Whenever somebody links to your story, it means that they pass it on to another website, and then to another website, another website, because it's an indicator for Google to say that people liked this stuff, they'd like to share it. And my website is one of the most shared websites, especially the blog articles in the voice of community. In fact, Joe Davis a couple of years ago, Joe Davis is the man behind voice actor websites, and he is an analytics guy. He is all about SEO, search engine optimization. He said, Paul, I just ran a search. And I found out that your website is the single most popular individual voice over website in the entire world is what how did that happen? Why said it's all about your blog, man. It's all about the blog, the single most visited individual website, it's not like a lack of voice 123 Are the other big ones that I shall name because they've got millions of visitors, I can never compete with that. But that that impressed me greatly. And that tells you something because I never set out to become the best or the most popular blog or the most visited website. It's never voice.com By the way, if you've never visited Nether voice.com new blog every week.

But that's the power of of social media. And here's the side effect. And now I'm finally coming to the answer to your question. When your website becomes popular, what happens when people type in a search for Dutch voiceover or European source or voiceover, or neutral English voiceover My name comes up in the top 10 On the first couple of pages. And that's how clients find me. So I tell people, you attract clients, you have to become a magnet yourself instead of chasing clients have clients chase you. And all things on my blog. I think that's what's happened that people find my, my, my website, my blog, they start reading, they start listening to the daily demos, and they end up hiring me for some reason.

Toby Ricketts

I mean, and that's what Google is noticing, like you mentioned, SEO and I went on a really big SEO journey from about three years ago. And made improvements like it's all about content now. And it's got to be content that people have to find interesting. Like, it can't just be pages of you know, nothing speak or voiceover repeated a million times. Like it's got to be evolving, changing multimedia backlinks, as you say, and Google takes it all into account. And the more you can, like, I'd say that you know people with with with other websites, the more relevant you can make yourself to someone, like wanting to find a voice or find out about voiceover, then like, the more the better success you're going to have, because that's what's Google is trying to intelligently do is find out the best answer for people. If you can be the answer, then it's brilliant. So you mentioned social media towards the end there in terms of you know, how that stuff has spread. And you're very visible on social media on Twitter, all of the sort of the big things, commenting on things all the time. I don't know how you find the time of the day to do

Paul Strikwerda

it. I kind of keep my big mouth.

Toby Ricketts

It's a valid marketing strategy to, you know, be doing little videos every day, I see people on LinkedIn and on Instagram and stuff doing these live videos in the studio today. I'm starting to do a bit more of it. But do you think social media didn't the blogging is more important than the social media stuff? Or do you need both these days?

Paul Strikwerda

I definitely need both. Because if you make a lot of noise, and nobody hears that you don't exist. So I make noise, and then it makes sure everybody hears using social media. Is it a good strategy? Well, yes or no, it really depends on how you use it. And I still have to discover the world of videos because I know that on Instagram, and I'm very active on Instagram reels, the videos are short videos like tick tock, they're all the thing you know that they get preferential treatment. So one of the things that I really should do, is become more proficient at producing videos, but it's much easier to write a piece of 2000 words than to produce a minute a video,

Toby Ricketts

I think the opposite is the I think the complete if it would take me days to write 2000 words, it would take me about six minutes to do a video. So maybe we could swap stories sometimes.

Paul Strikwerda

Oh yeah, you got to play your strengths. That's true. It's different for different people. And so, but that's one aspect of myself and my social media exposure that I have yet to explore. Unfortunately, I moved to the Northeast Kingdom in Vermont lately. I've been here since November 5. And it's this outpost of America five miles from the Canadian border where nothing ever happens. And I like to keep it that way. But the nature is stunning. So I started posting little nature, pictures of where I live and what I know and what I do. And people seem to like that. So maybe I could become the pole strip reader of Vermont now of narrating my own nature, nature videos, you the data back from them from a golf, I can do that. But you know what to tell what I tell my students because I have a few students here and there. And I call it well, the coaching that I do is I help people to stand out as a as a voiceover become that shiny needle in the haystack, right? I tell people, you know, what you should start doing first is do what you love already doing. So for me, my love was writing for other people could be photography, some people, it's videography. Some people like to draw cartoons, but do something that you love, because it won't take as much time and will give you pleasure. And when you are finding pleasure in something it shows and people hear it in your voice. So do what you love to do and make a mock that way. create yourself an audience, and then you can drag themselves into the world of voiceovers as well. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

it gives you energy. I think that's the key thing like I find with you know, if you do something that you love, everyday like voiceover, it gives you energy to do other things. And then like it's it's self sustaining in a way, whereas it doesn't take your attempts to keep doing it. Yes,

Paul Strikwerda

yes, yes. Because because it's such a crazy, it's such a crazy business that we're in really the uncertainty with a variety as well, you know, with uncertainty comes the variety as well, because you never know what tomorrow will bring. If it even brings anything and sometimes, you know, I don't know what to do, because I have weeks where nothing happens. Really don't you ask? You asked me Oh, how do you produce all that content? When you see me producing a lot of content, usually nothing happens. Paul is trying to desperately stay busy.

Toby Ricketts

It's very true. Like I I've, I've learned to embrace I used to get really nervous as a sub subcontractor or an independent contractor. When you have those quiet weeks and you think, Oh, well, that's it, maybe the dream is over and you get the imposter syndrome and you think, Oh, that's it. That's it career's over, I'll define the end of the week at the supermarket. But I've really learned always comes back it's always goes back and it comes back with a vengeance usually. So now I really enjoy those weeks where I have no work and I'm just like, now I can catch up on this stuff I can do this stuff I've been meaning to do. And it's like, you know, as a as an independent contractor, you don't get you know, four weeks of paid leave a year. So you kind of make that your paid leave in a way so you know, it's I've learned

Paul Strikwerda

to embrace ridiculous thing about living in the United States where it's all about work, work, work, work, work, and I'm a European, I'm used to at least six weeks of summer holidays, vacations, as they say, Here are six to eight weeks, the Americans have what you leave work for more than two weeks, and you don't leave your phone number and email address with your employer. He doesn't get in touch with you, you don't get in touch with your business. What ways that to conduct a business you always have to be able to be reached and called upon said no, no, no, my vacation that's preventative health care. When I want to take off, I'm not taking any voiceover kits with me, no travel gets nothing. I want to be there for my family and myself to recharge the batteries. Because if I don't, then I'll go crazy. So this whole thing about work, work work. Always being available. I don't buy into that at all, I'm telling you. It's such a relief, because I started doing that after I had my stroke three years ago. And that was an eye opening experience because I was one of those people who's always chasing his dream and client after client and the more I did, the better I felt about myself and I said your I don't want my self image to be linked by what I do. What I do is just an aspect of who I am and who I am is more important than what I do. So I really was working around the clock I was in my studio. And I tell the story a lot but I'll keep it short but I was in the studio and I woke up on the floor of a studio and I was partially paralyzed and I had never experienced anything like that I had a terrible headache and and I could barely speak could lose part of my face was paralyzed. And I recognized this because I'm having a stroke but it was by myself in the home in my soundproof studio I said this is the end it's desert I'm waiting I was waiting for the tunnel and the light to show up and didn't unfortunately but said this is this time to meet my maker because I was thought I was gonna die. And obviously I didn't die I'm still here. But to cut a long, long story short, I was supposed to be at a meeting and my wife is expecting me she got a bad feeling and she asked a local police force to do a welfare check on me and they found me

Toby Ricketts

wow that's because the door inward isn't that right so you couldn't like actually get another reading a blog at the time.

Paul Strikwerda

I was leaning against the door it was just The ordeal to get it open and get me out. I was almost suffocating because I didn't have any ventilation in the room. Yes, very smart. Always have a studio with ventilation people because it might not end up well for you. But, you know, it took me about a year to get back to me, milk itself itself was a little bit weird and strange. And but you know, I decided I looked at life. And so you know, it's also relative or called fame and working for big clients and building a name for yourself. What's gonna be left at the end of the day, it was worth it. What's it worth is worth dying for the studio on the floor and gas struck for? And I certainly know, forget it, forget it, I don't want that. I'm no longer going to chase clients let them do the hard work.

Toby Ricketts

It's interesting, because when I remember when I read that blog, it was of special interest because I'm one of the things I do in my spare time is I'm a volunteer ambulance officer at the local ambulance center. So I go out and calls and I've, you know, gone to people with strokes and stuff. So I was reading it, I was kind of like fascinated about being a voiceover and that whole thing of the booth and like how that all worked and stuff, but you're so right that like when you're confronted with those life and death situations, even if it's vicarious, and you're just sort of present, you do have this whole, it just shifts you into this other level, this top down view. And you're like, what's really important, like, you know, it's really it's really refreshing and like things like I always wear my seatbelt, no matter how short the drivers because you just see things like you know, people didn't read the seatbelts. And it's just like that tiny little action makes a huge difference. And just like having your cell phone on you all the time. Like you're saying the booth you could dial or something. So it's yeah, that was a very interesting article. And it

Paul Strikwerda

was. So it's, yeah, go on. Go. Go.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, so you you are you you primarily doing, like European voices, like Dutch voiceovers, or you called on to do different Euro voices? What kind of what's the character of the work you do? Is it character work?

Paul Strikwerda

Well, you're obviously talking to a character, but most of the stuff is, is interesting. Because it's, I'd say about 80% of the work I do is boring. Elearning which I tried to make interesting. And the most in demand accent is my what they call neutral accent neutral English doesn't really exist, but it's kind of you know, you listen to the voice and say, Where's this person from? I don't know. Is he British? Is he from the United States of America? Is it from New Zealand? No, there's something an in between land of weirdness that I have cornered that market for us. And it seems so if they want to voice that doesn't sound like Yankee or stiff, upper lip brittle solid like that. I I am called upon. So it's a lot of international business stuff. And lately, the pharmaceutical companies have discovered me and they think that I sound like some, some intellectual or somebody who can tell about the latest breakthrough medicine or therapy. And they sometimes they wanted to make more British more American, I can also do a Dutch accent or we talk like this, like normal Dutch people do. The Dutch people have trouble pronouncing the th this a decent death thing instead of this and that. So it was a talk to the client? What kind of poll Do you want to have today on the menu, I try to give that to them. And I'd say about 80% of my work is in English. And then about 20% is still in touch. One of the last things I did a couple of days ago was a museum tour. I like doing guided tours as well, because it's kind of a relaxed pace, and you take people on a journey. It's all about the journey, not the destination. And this is all about global warming. So it was socially relevant as well. So 80% is like that, that every now and then is the odd commercial. So funny when I when I first got my status on a very British, I was asked to be the voice of the Beatles musical to have a jukebox musical called Let it be. And instead of hiring a Brit, they hired me Dutchman to be the voice of the ultimate British musical on Broadway. Which is fun because the next time I came to New York, I was in the back of the taxi and I could hear my own promo, which rarely happens. So I do that too. I still do Attenborough a little bit. My impersonation is much sought after.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, every job it seems on the beta places for eight and

Paul Strikwerda

a half. Yes, yes. Yes. Again, it was very fun because I'm one of the very few touch voiceovers that has had a national commercial in the United States. Not as me but as somebody talking. They'd like Richard Attenborough about Hawaiian french toast from IHOP the International House of Pancakes. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

it's always fun and feels kind of naughty that like I've done national sports in the US as a American voiceover and just thinking that this I'm just in the middle of nowhere in the studio and New Zealand interest and like it's going out to every home in America to kind of

Paul Strikwerda

say about the imposter syndrome. Well, we are imposters, imposters. Exactly that's that's that's acting acting is being the good imposter, the best imposters get the the Hollywood Walk of Fame star and they get an Oscar. Yeah, the best liars are the best actors. You know. It's true that we get paid to lie because we're pretenders. Yes.

Toby Ricketts

So we're on the the VO life podcast brought to you by gravy for the brain OPI Oceania and you've interacted with Greg for the brain. Over the years. You've a very tight opinion of us. Why is that? Yes,

Paul Strikwerda

yes, yes, absolutely. This is a business about personalities and about connections, personal connections. And the first time I met Peter Peter Dixon and Hugh Edwards was at VO Atlanta. And I've always had a thing for the Brits, I have to say, Holland being close to the UK, me working for the BBC for an hour for a year, which is one of the highlights of my career. If you may say, I've always had a fondness for the British language and British drama. So I have this natural affinity for anything British. So I don't know what would have happened if gray for the brain would have been in Australia, Austrian company or German company with my mother headed off. But you never know. I like these guys instantaneously. I didn't even know what they were up to. Because who knows what bravery for the brain does? It's Yeah, well, it's a name even come from you know,

Unknown Speaker

it's a food company.

Paul Strikwerda

But it was makes for great puns because I wrote this whole story about my sidetrack here, but about my recovering from stroke. I ended with that God had different plans for me that it was my time to go yet. Cuz I was too brainy for the grave. That's pretty good. I love playing with language no matter what language it is. So we met and we hit it off. As they say over here, we hit it off really well. And then started find out what these guys were doing. They were often these amazing, amazing trainings. And really, what I liked is about they they don't seem to if I'm mistaken, let me know. They don't seem to run a get rich, quick scheme. This is really in depth training. That was not there to exploit you. Because there's so many other companies, as you know, that are preying on vulnerable hopefuls that think they can have a Korean voiceovers and if only you buy their Package, which includes 10 demos for free. They will promise you the world. And you end up on an island tried to get off and how did they get there? So so what I found is that this is a company that is really working in a very ethical manner. And going where others have not gone dig, they go deeper, more in depth and beyond. And they keep on supporting you no matter what level sounds like a commercial no matter what level of your career you are. But it's true. That this is not run by pretenders. This is with people, like Peter like you have huge resumes. So they're backed up experienced to better their connections, and they have formed this whole network of love above all is that, you know, colleagues become friends. And that's something I love about the voice of water in general, especially with the with the people that graduate the brain surrounds itself with, you feel like you've never seen each other. But you know, you have something wonderful in common. silliness, of course, because nobody takes themselves too seriously. Hence the name problem, which I also liked. They don't pretend to be better than they are. But it's just fun to hang around with too. And anything that's fun is makes it more easy to learn. So it's this perfect combination of being thoroughly intrigued, thoroughly entertained, but also educated at the same time. I think it's kind of the the university level of voiceover training, I honestly mean that run by the most ethical and wonderful people who also started this, this this voice of conference of one voice and One Voice Awards. And so I said, you know, this is something I can stand behind fully. This is something that I want to associate myself with. And I started doing that. So when, when the first conference was starting, he reached out to me and said, Paul, can you talk about it? Maybe you find it interesting. Maybe you want to write something in your blog about it. And I find it interesting. I wrote about it and people responded to it. And since then, every year when they have a new conference, we get in touch every year when they have new products or services. We get in touch. And it's kind of my way of I know it's cliche, but it's my way of giving back of how much these guys are giving us as a community, me as a person to tell you this, this goes beyond and I'm getting a little bit emotional here. But this goes way beyond talking about the business and voiceovers. Because when I was in the depths of misery in a hospital bed, thinking that it would never talk again, because that was one of the things the stroke did to me. I lost my voice, the ability to speak to emote even one of the first people to reach out to me and say, Hey, Hi, buddy, how you doing? Was you Edwards. And he's kept on doing that ever since every couple of months or so we check in with each other and say how you doing? And that has meant the world to me. So when you mentioned great through the brain, I will walk on fire for them on hot coals for them and do anything I can to help them and spread the message. And and

I can't say enough good things about them. Wow. By the way, this was not a paid promotion. Because I don't get paid by them either. When I write a stock is it's free publicity. But it's really us working together promoting something for the betterment of society. Yeah, because I think there's too many, too many people who are of ill repute, who take advantage of impressionable people. They are not, they are, as I say here, the real deal. It's true. I joke about it. But I think you know what I'm talking about, you know, just when someone like you being associated with Shadid with them as well doing this podcast series, with people who are all in some way linked to grave for the brain. That is a great tribute to the organization that they have built. And then they have this worldwide expansion as well. So they didn't want to keep it confined to the UK. No, the goodies must be spread all around the world. So in every geographical region, like the Oceania, you have grave with the brain for siano for aficionados. So you create more than just voiceovers because we can talk frankly, right, because what we do is is not really about voiceovers at all, I think it's really this discussion that we're having to this interview, it's not really about voiceovers, it's about living up to who you meant to be as a person, you know, about what makes life worthwhile and fulfilling. And for me, it's, it's wonderful if I can be a doctor in a script that will promote certain medications that can save lives. It's wonderful, but it's ultimately the people that you meet. In life, we have an impact on you. And you learn a lot about yourself through your voice, because you can't hide anything, the voice will reveal everything, whether you're tired, whether you just didn't in a divorce, or have gone through a stroke or anything, your voice cannot hide anything. Yeah, so we're very raw, we expose ourselves, we become vulnerable, we have to deal with criticism all the time with rejection all the time, you know, it's the uncertainty of making it to another week or another month. This really throws you back at who you are. And you got to be you got to be strong to survive as a as a one person business. And it's a lonely business, of course, because you're there in your new and improved studio. And I'm here in the middle of nowhere in Vermont, and not really anyone to talk to you about how buddies It's a lonely existence that very few people could really stand because we are social beings, we need water cooler conversations and be with one another. And you don't really have that unless you find a community of people that are like you that know what you're going through, then I'm not really there professionally, but say, Hey, how you doing, buddy? I hurt you were in the hospital. If there's anything I can do, let me know I can do it.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, yeah. And the voice industry like I've I've been really struck every time I've gone to one of the one voice conferences, or or just reached out to anyone in voiceover is that there is this genuine connection that everyone in the working voiceover seems to have with each other. And we don't like it's a competitive game in a way. But I like the fact that when you wit someone, someone wins a job against you. It's not that they did better than you. It's that they were more certain they were more suited to the job. So there's actually any competitiveness is kind of faux competitive risk, because we're all just doing our best and sometimes we're not right for the role, and that's totally fine. And it's the attitude, I think that people need to walk into it with is that, you know, it's about making yourself you know, more appropriate for different kinds of jobs and, and but I I'm I'm fascinated and just I really love that I found this, this industry that does have so much warmth, and there's so much genuine connection. And you know,

Paul Strikwerda

there's so much unpretentiousness, I know it's not a word, but people are unpretentious. Exactly. Yeah. And because I noticed that when I worked in radio and I worked for this big broadcasting company in the Netherlands. And there were two departments radio and television. And both had nice people, but very different people. People in television were much more aware of their personality, because they were in the picture literally all the time, they were recognized on on the streets. And they became very recluse because they didn't want to be bothered by everybody. So they became not so nice persons, but always very, very aware of what they would look like how they would sound like and they did not become themselves and we voice over and radio people, nobody sees us, people only hear us and we're kind of the anonymous workers in the entertainment industry, the disembodied voices. So this, this whole thing about oh, look at me, and his big ego is not really here. A few big egos in the industry, but they deserved it. And rightly so they can, they can be proud of what they have achieved, but not as many as you find in the more visual arts. And that's what I always loved about the voiceover thing. The unpretentiousness of it all, said the end, you know, it's it. It's so fragile, and it's so easily forgotten. You know, people say, Oh, my God did a big commercial. I had to get used to that when it came to United States, people are proud of doing the commercial. And they said, Okay, great. You did a commercial for bathroom tissue. So what you know,

Unknown Speaker

put it on my gravestone

Paul Strikwerda

doesn't really impress me. While you know, it's a national commercial for bathroom tissue. Everybody heard me? Oh, well, okay, great. What do you do for mankind today? You know, it's, to me, it's very oriented about money, and status. And if you want to forget about your status, just get yourself a stroke. Nothing is is worth anything anymore. It comes back to the very simple things in life that make me going and probably make you go into because there's a reason why you do the EMT thing too. Because there's more to life than voiceover sorry, people. There's more to live in voiceovers? Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. And I do for one another. And that matters. Yeah, exactly.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. And I mean, I think like when I was about to talk about, you know, advice for beginner voiceovers and coaching and things like that, and going on to your book, but like, when people are coming into the industry, like I say to them, this is definitely not a get rich, quick scheme. You may see voiceover artists getting paid, you know, a stupendous amount for one commercial, but they've spent 10 years getting to that point. And they've done most of that, because they absolutely love it. And they were doing it even if they weren't getting paid, which probably was happening anyway, you know, because I would I know that, you know, if I won the lottery or sees the need for money, I would still do this because I get such a kick out of it. And I think it has to be that way. And, you know, doing auditions, everyone should be fun. It shouldn't be a total chore. Did you sort of concur with that you've always found that gives you strength? And that's the advice you give?

Paul Strikwerda

Yes, absolutely. I have to laugh because it is something that makes you happy. And if you do, what you make makes you happy. You have a rich life. And that's, to me is the main thing is to have a rich life in more ways than just monetary compensation mean, I'm not gonna lie about it, I can make a very decent and comfortable living. So it's really easy for me to say, but I've been in the trenches I've, I've, I've been away during the restaurant. I know how hard that is. And so I really started from a big unknown to somebody that that is sought out by clients. And when you look at successful people, you just look at the result and not at the road that that took them there. It's like, you know, you go to a concert. I love classical music. And you see this wonderful classical pianist, make it seem seamless, easy to do, you know, piano concerto Beethoven, Brahms. They just that seems like, Oh, you're such a natural talent. But what we don't see is the many, many, many hours and hardships these people have to go through. I tell people, there's no success without sacrifice. Sorry, you gotta sacrifice you gotta want it more than anybody else in the world. Because otherwise, you're not going to get there. One of my friends is a classical pianist. And a new is going to be famous. You know why? Because every morning, he went to the conservatory, he didn't have a grand piano at his home. But they had pianos for the pianist. And he was the first one in line to be able to open that door to get himself grand piano so you could practice for a couple of hours a day. That's the spirit. That's the spirit. That's what you have to have. You really, really have to want it not something on the side. Not as some hobby or pastime, you really have to want it. And you have to know that involves much more than talking to the microphone, or pointing at a microphone, which you can't see but Hello. It's it's not about that really, at the end of the day. You know, that's only 20% of the workout. If I could do 20% of the work 100% of the time, that would be lovely. Yeah, all got to do the boring stuff, but everybody wants Should the fun stuff. And being becoming successful is having to do and wanting to do the stuff that you think is not too fun. But in the end could be very fun to like, attracting clients through writing a blog, you got to find something that really works for you. And that sets you apart

Toby Ricketts

from making videos, like making videos. And it's funny, you use the example of a classical pianist because I often say to like, one of my examples is like, people come to the Veyron voiceover courses in person occasionally. And people say, you know, when will I start making money from this? Or like, you know, when when can I expect a return on my investment? And it's kind of like, if you've just decided to start a new career, like in something creative. It's a bit like deciding to like, learn the grand piano. It's like if someone went to a music teacher and said, right, when can I make my money back on these lessons? They'd be like, Well, that depends on how much effort you put in how naturally good you are, like, you know, with the drive and determination, like so many factors. And I feel like with VoiceOver, they just expect to like I can read already. I sound pretty good. I'm basically ready. When it's just this this behind the curtain is so much more that people don't understand.

Paul Strikwerda

Oh, yes. It's the whole Wizard of Oz. situation. There's a lot going on behind the curtain that you don't see. But yeah, yeah.

Toby Ricketts

What was the experience of writing the book, like actually, like, what was

Paul Strikwerda

the book because it was really written? It's basically a collection of my old blog. That's one of the Okay,

Toby Ricketts

yeah, fair enough. Yeah. And I was I was, I was a bit like, I wasn't sure because it says making money in your PJs. It sounds like it's easy. Yeah. Were you worried about that title that it would say like, they would sound a bit too easy. And people would read it and think like, by the end of the book, they could be making money. Or they horribly disappointed, something

Paul Strikwerda

really silly and catchy. That was the only reason why I chose it. Yeah. And

Toby Ricketts

actually, incidentally, I almost always wear PJs, when I work at night, when I'm

Paul Strikwerda

wearing PJs right now, because it's bloody early in the morning. I just came out of bed. Honestly, that's no, that's, that's that's the whole deal about it. I had to find a silly hook that people would remember me by. And so they could do so like have a sustainable career in voiceovers or make $1,000 a month as a voiceover artist. And that was actually boring. The best things come out of the most silly thing. So I woke up one morning, I had to go to the studio didn't care to get dressed. They said, Yo, this is the best job ever. I don't even have to wear normal clothes. I can do this in my PJs. Yeah. Well, there it is, Mickey money your PJs. And I kind of addressed that in the first chapter as well, that is, in fact, nothing like easy money at all, you can do this in your PJs, and you probably will, and you should, I can highly recommend it. But, you know, you really have to put on your big boy pants and big girl pants to to make make a dent in the universe of voice RT. So it's not as easy. So it's kind of playful, I play with the ideas. And often, that's not a good quality of mine. But I mock people a little bit, I preach a little bit because I'm the son of a minister. I try to to mock people who want to make things look like it's quick and easy. And never is everything that you think is quick and easy never is. Because otherwise everybody would do it. Everybody would be successful at it. And it's not. So yes, my approach is really to be treating this very, very, very seriously. But with a lot of fun. I had a pleasure that I had a background in radio, which is not always an advantage after my my radio career has helped me tremendously as as a freelancer running the business as a business, of course, but also in the whole thing about approaching people in a business because as a as a roaming reporter, you have to talk to people that don't want to talk to you. You have to talk them into doing an interview, they have to do the interview. They have to cut and paste it and put it in bite sized pieces. All of these things come together as a voice artist, because I had to talk to lots of people who were not intent on hiring me. But I had to convince them like Mel Blanc, by the way, there's a nice segue. He he knocked on the doors of Warner Brothers for two years. And the guy who's hiring voiceover said, Sorry, we have all the voices we need. But he kept on coming back and back and back again until the guy who was in charge of hiring the voices died. Somebody else got in this place. And he said Mel Blanc. Well thank you know what, let's have coffee. Let's hear your voices. And that's how you got in the door. And the second job he did was the voice of a pig, which became Porky Pig. So you need this persistence, this kind of I don't care whatever the outcome is, I'm doing it anyway thing. Even though you know that everything depends on it. You have to work as if it doesn't. Because otherwise you become too desperate. You don't want to be too desperate. You don't all other thing you should Didn't do is invest lots of money and lots of expensive equipment in the beginning and, and this has become fingered as a lot easier to start in this business because you can buy a new microphone for two holida $100 Like the RODE NT ones perfectly fine. Voice Over microphone super quiet.

Toby Ricketts

And the Focusrite Scarlett series, they're incredibly good value for their sound these days, like go back five years, that was just not possible. So I know

Paul Strikwerda

it's been it's really been amazing how that has, how the technology has cheapened in the way. And so it's easy to get started. But you know, I am a frequent visitor of eBay and I can recognize a voice artist who has given up his dream. Post

Unknown Speaker

the package executive package that is online, it's like so focus, focus, right solo, some headphones

Paul Strikwerda

with a free pop filter.

Toby Ricketts

So you've got a new book coming out. You're telling me before What's this one making lots of money in your pjs

Paul Strikwerda

don't wear anything the naked voiceover don't find a catchy title yet. But some people said I should put my big fat face on the cover that will sell so a lot but I I was I was going to call it the self sustaining voice over because that's that's the big thing that I that I teach people advocate in my blog as well to become self sustaining. Sustaining career not just a fling. Sounds boring. So I gotta find something else. So if you have any suggestions, please write a gravy of the brain attention to Mr. Paul string for the middle of nowhere Vermont, USA. And I will get get to me straightaway and they'll give you credits. But it's really about what it's what it takes to become a self sustaining. VoiceOver so. So what's going to be is a couple of years ago, I noticed that the subscribership to my blog was stagnating. And I thought that I had reached the limit of people that I could reach because we have a very small community. I only have 40,000 subscribers, which isn't known to the big bloggers, but a lot of people who blogs, whoa, 40,000. That's a whole thing. But I want to at least have 400,000 and 4 million, why not $4 billion subscribers. So I said I had to tap into a new market. And I started doing micro blogs under the name of Nether voice on Instagram. And Instagram gives you about 2200 characters to write a story. And so I do a mini blog every single day about the business. So it's something that you can read in a minute. So what I'm going to do for this new book is just have bite sized pieces that you can reach read at the beginning of the end of the day or just in between me to take a break when you need like a vitamin shot in the arm, a little bit energy boost. But running a business about doing voiceovers about being a good person.

Toby Ricketts

That's a good idea. I often would need something that's like well, well my audio is processing or something I need something that's like yeah, like a minute long just to pass that time. So we're not just staring at a progress bar.

Paul Strikwerda

Yeah, cuz people's attention spans are getting shorter and shorter. So I tend to write these lengthy blogs that it takes us seven minutes or seven minutes to read. But I try to be thorough and so if you if you like the small parts of try to convert people to come to my website and eventually read my blog that's been working, I am tapping into a new and younger audience then the Instagram people are coming to my blog because they if you want to have a more in depth story, you can read the full story on my blog, but the short things I think I caught on to something there. And so the nice thing for me is that it's basically already written now the big trick about being a good writer is not being good writer bits but being a good writer you have to edit your own work and make it even better. So I'm in that process now selecting out of all the pieces that have had something that is not as voluminous as making money in a PJs because that is a chunk of a book because I noticed that some people let me get it here at this and self promotion

Unknown Speaker

app to screen to mess with

Paul Strikwerda

the scenery here.

Unknown Speaker

Oh wow that was candid.

Paul Strikwerda

always worked with very sturdy equipment. Exactly. But the best for me so Gobo for your life from GE ik acoustics you together you have a base panel like this then you have somebody that

Toby Ricketts

you can stand it up but like he did try a Japanese screen or something.

Paul Strikwerda

Exactly. Yes. So this is about is

Unknown Speaker

thick, isn't it?

Paul Strikwerda

Is very thick. It has too many pages. I pedaled this around for a couple of voiceover friends that I wanted to have the input from. And they said, Paul, this will never sell because it's too long. And look at the last page is 423 Bloody pages. Wow. Yeah, you could build

Unknown Speaker

and then a bookshelf out of those books I know. But

Paul Strikwerda

as you can see, there's a lot of whitespace. So like to make things in bite size paragraphs, but so my promise, my dear readers, my next book is going to be a lot shorter. And sweeter, I hope.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Like the short form, I think, like and I'm gonna subscribe to Instagram as well, if I'm not already to catch those blogs, because that sounds very interesting.

Paul Strikwerda

It's just easy. Add another voice and you'll you'll get something every day. And in fact, today I'm writing about the birthday of a certain voice artist. Oh, who is beginning it Surprise, surprise.

Toby Ricketts

You often blog on technology, voiceover technology, which is one of my passions. I just love technology associated with voice. I love helping people with the technology because like some people find it really difficult. And I just find it so easy and easy to explain that I just I just want to help people with it. Because I it reaffirms the knowledge of myself as well. Actually do to your article about the U 87. Microphones? Yes, I ordered one. And I hoped it would be here by the time we did this interview, but it's still in transit. But I'm really because I've got a u 87. here and I want to put them side by side. There it is. I wanted like absolutely, like do an article that that just like picks every detail and massive because a bowl accounts. It works really well. Right? Yeah. So I'm very keen to send fake so I'll send you my test results, side by side of the real thing. And those because like, it sounds like there's not much in it, which is interesting. But you've blogged the like, What's your favorite thing about studio sound is it mics, it interfaces, computers are the whole lot.

Paul Strikwerda

There's nothing that I don't like really, I love playing around with them. It's it just makes juice to toy around with things and have manufacturers send me free stuff. I need to get to know that thing too, that I that I that I'm on a mission to to educate my readers, and educate myself really because there's so much great stuff being made right now take for instance company like Austrian audio, which just came came out of AKG and Luhut. And I always loved discovering things that were not used by others. Because I if there's something I hate is that people say this is the inst industry standard, say must have the industry standard. Otherwise, you don't count as a voiceover artists. There's so much great stuff on the road NTG five in the short shotgun microphone is a wonderful like the for one thing is way better than a 416 of a cheaper two. So why not test that. And so I wanted to give people an idea of there's so much more than going for the TLM 103, or the MK h 416, or the U 87. So out of my own curiosity, I started writing about it. And then I got in touch with a guy who runs a big microphone database on the internet. And he now runs a company called Roswell audio, where he's making his own microphones. And as I'm trying to, as I'm talking about, I'm trying to think about the name of the website is a Big Mac microphone database. Anyway, he invited me to start writing for him and test microphone. So that's what I did. And this is a test for him and write stuff about it. I might as well do it for myself to put it on my blog. And that's what I did. And the nice thing is that once you write honest reviews, people recognize that and manufacturers too. And I tried to write about it in a non technical way because I'm not a George Witham who is one of the experts on home studio building and technology. I'm not a sound engineer like Uncle Roy, your cousin is or Dan Leonard, you know, those are people who approach it often from from the more technical side, I just use my voice over ears in my voiceover surroundings and say what would work what wouldn't break the bank and what makes this microphone different from other microphones? And what do I think would be a good bet for people? Because I hate I hate people spending money on things that they don't know how to use yet. Yeah. Or did they go broke on equipment that they don't even need? You know?

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly like people buying UAV sevens because it's the industry standard. And it's like yeah, it's so overpowered in terms of like what you need and you also like the thing about like when I bought this UAV seven I was in my other my old booth and it actually it's it sounded terrible in that old booth because I'd like I was I had designed it around for 16 to a super directional all the soundproofing was on one end, but a cardioid comes in and starts picking up all of the room ambience. And it was just And it's one of those mics that's brutally honest as well, if you don't have a good space, it just does not sound good. So it was a real like wake up call for me in terms of like, you know, don't you don't just spend the earth and then it doesn't just deliver suddenly a great voiceover. It's like, that's when the work starts. And then you can you can go further with, I think, these mics and they're very dependable. But in terms of sound, it doesn't save you any money at all. Like it won't get you gigs.

Paul Strikwerda

And I suppose all your oils, that's what it does. Yeah. And so a lot of microphones are much more flattering. But now, what's happened since COVID, is that a lot of people have entered the market. They all thought, you know, this is the best job to be doing from your basement or your attic. So we've had a lot of new voiceovers, which I don't mind, everybody is allowed to chase his own or her own dream. But in order to separate the wheat from the chaff, some agents have said, well, you're not going to be added to my roster unless you have this and that type of equipment. Yeah, so people buy Apollo preamplifiers, and the whole package with a plugins and they have to have the 416 and the TLM, one or three and the UHD. Seven, and otherwise, you you're not on the map, and you're not taking your job seriously, which I think is nonsense. But it is kind of a badge of honor. And look what I can afford to I've landed. So on one hand, people can tell whether you're serious or not, but the equipment that you have. And so I had run into this problem because I had this wonderful shotgun microphone, called the Cinco de

Unknown Speaker

to omega Chai. I heard about this, the Pratik scored 156

Paul Strikwerda

US dollars, but retails normally for 250. And honestly, I can't tell the difference between the D two and 460. Maybe my ears are not refined enough. But you know what kinds are not listening on refined equipment either. So I think it's often a moot point. But so I was using that one. And I was landing big jobs. And nobody ever said, Oh, you you sounds like you're using a cheap Chinese microphone. Yeah. Yeah. But then it became time to get to a different space in Vermont now and I thought it would be time to upgrade my microphone a little bit. And I wanted to find another shortcut microphone and I ended up with this one. This is the Sennheiser MKH 8060, which is the successor to the famous 416. Very short one, two, I'm not going to unplug because you want me not hear me. But look this.

Unknown Speaker

Yeah, it's like half the length, isn't it? Yeah. Yeah, baby.

Paul Strikwerda

Those five things for me.

Toby Ricketts

More oh, five, I think the four or five they did a version 2.6. That was like, shorter. But, but yeah. And I think the longer the barrel is, the more the interference tube is the more sharp and the more like pronounced the HyperCard effectors. Yeah, it's just really is just like laser focused on you get, but it becomes unwieldy at a certain point. It's like once it's 20 feet long, it's kind of impractical. Now it's

Paul Strikwerda

out of the way, you know, when you do a lot of social media, you don't want this big microphone in front of your face. So yeah, it works really nice in this direction.

Toby Ricketts

I like this one in front of my face, though. This is my like, it's I feel like this this culture that's grown up in our microphones, like, it's the same reason that like Conan O'Brien, and they put a microphone on their desk. You know, it gives, it's a visual indicator of like, this is a microphone. This is what you expect when you see a voiceover and I've kind of like I took that and thought like, with my whole, like, Zoom background. I was like, let's market the space.

Paul Strikwerda

That's the background is that that's fake.

Unknown Speaker

I know. That's real. It's real. Right? Yeah. But it's yeah, the Fender Rhodes. I see. It is it's Fender Rhodes. Yeah, man. Do

Toby Ricketts

you play suitcase road? So yeah, play keys. Yep, absolutely. Yeah. And a little bit of bass on the wall there as well, somewhere fantastic. And drink whiskey in the background. So all my interests are represented, you know, around my head, along with a voice summarizing

Paul Strikwerda

all that's great for the brain is about you know, making music, drinking good whiskey and enjoying a nice microphone. Exactly.

Toby Ricketts

Exactly. Yeah. We better wrap it up soon. Because I mean, you're beginning to work day soon. And it's and we've succeeded

Paul Strikwerda

in the United States. Today, we sort of made the honor the the people who lost their lives for their country. So we got Fun and Games, because when America celebrates something, it's always fun and games, no matter whether it's Memorial Day or not. Yeah, so that means discounts in the stores gotta go to buy. Yeah, and we have parades. We have these poor veterans who are like 80 9100 years old, and we parade them around the town from making walk for a couple of miles. And at the end, they have to listen to speeches that never end and then they have to eat and drink again and buy stuff. That's the

Unknown Speaker

stuff is the rule. Yeah, keep it going. Keep it all going.

Paul Strikwerda

Absolutely. So on this Veterans Day, bye, bye. But here's here's one, here's one thing I want to do. Yeah. Because you've been so nice to me and give me all this time to to talk about myself and about Mel Blanc and all these things. So if you're watching this interview right now, and you think that what you've heard is Interesting and silly and absurd, but also, hey, I'd like to hear more or learn more. Please write to me, please. At Paul at Nether voice.com One word Nether as the Netherlands voices voice Paul another voice.com. reference this interview. And I will send you a free digital copy of my book, a PDF version, which is even after one even longer because everything I didn't put in the printed version, it's like 600 pages of of me. You can watch every aspect of the voiceover business. And I write stuff that people don't like to hear. So I can be honest, brutally honest. But fair, I think. But so yeah, pull it near the voice.com References interview, even if you hear this, that 10 years from now, 20 years from now, I will still be there. Hopefully, I can send you a PDF copy of the book for free just as a way to say thank you for putting up with me all this time.

Toby Ricketts

No problem. No, it's been a pleasure. Thank you so much for joining me and all the best with your your Veterans Day celebrations.

Paul Strikwerda

Well, my my father in law is a veteran, and he will be all dressed up and I will be applauding him. Yes. Which is very wonderful to do. So it's I make fun of it. But it's a serious thing too. I think that we should give credit to the people who put their lives on the line, you know, and we his voiceovers live such protective secluded life here. But it's not an easy job. But in many ways, it's a very comfortable job.

Toby Ricketts

I do feel like I have to gratitude is very important in this job. You know what you work hard for it, but you do when you get there, it's nice to really sort of you know, to to give thanks for it and acknowledge the

Paul Strikwerda

reason you and I can do what we do in our freedom is because we owe a lot to these to these people. So with all jokes, joking apart, I really, really mean that. I'm glad that have an opportunity a day to honor these people. And really, I think we should have every day a day like that where we honor the people who gave everything without expecting anything. So on this somber note, we have to say with Mel Blanc, that's all folks. Thank you, Toby. It was a

Unknown Speaker

joy. Thanks, Paul. It absolutely was Cheers. Bye

Transcribed by https://otter.ai

With 17 Audie awards under his belt, more than any other male VO in single-voiced titles, Simon Vance is an Audiobook legend.
Join Toby Ricketts and Simon Vance for an in-depth chat about the world of Audiobooks, and how a spectacular and improbable coincidence brought them together!

Find out about Simon Vance's early career,

how he ended up being one of the worlds foremost audiobook narrators,

how to perform differently as a narrator versus a stage actor,

what the trajectory and shape of an audiobook narration career looks like,

how to get experience before entering the world of audiobook narration VO,

the politics of Audiobooks,

Some behind the scenes stories of the Audible 'Sandman' series,

Some more behind the scenes stories about the Dune audiobook series,

Tips for maintaining characters,

Simon takes us on a technical tour of his home studio booth,

A discussion of home studios vs professional studios,

Why he enjoys the work of narration.

Enjoy! Visit simon's website at www.simonvance.com

Here is a transcript of the interview:

Toby Ricketts

Hello voice nerds. This is Toby Ricketts and this is VO life my monthly chat with people who are big in the voiceover world. We've got movers and shakers from all over from agents to actors and everything in between. So welcome. It's good to have you along. Very excited about today's chat, because I'm speaking with one of the biggest names in audio books today. He has out narrated over 1000 titles, been nominated for 40 audio awards, won 17 of them, he's in the audible Hall of Fame. I'm going to just keep going on because I want to get across how ridiculous it is. And it's got the most audio nominations for a single male narrator on titles of anyone. So it's my great pleasure to introduce Simon Vance to the podcast.

Simon Vance

Hi, Toby, nice to meet you.

Toby Ricketts

It's very nice to meet you as well. Just starting off with the one have you come across those coincidences in life? And you're like, what were the chances of that happening. And I just want to spell out exactly how we got in touch because it's one of the biggest coincidences that's ever occurred to me. So the scene is that I've just listened to the Sandman series on Audible, of which you play a part you've got a character role in that. And, and I wanted to see the film dune that was coming up. And so I thought, well, I'll I'll put, I want to read the text. So I don't so I can see, you know, the movies, I'm gonna listen to the audio, but before that, which also happened to narrate I hadn't quite started yet. And then my mum, who lives here in New Zealand with me said, Oh, I caught up with a yet an old friend that I haven't seen since like the 1960s the other day, because I saw him on Facebook. And he mentioned that he was in some sort of voiceover thing. And I was like, Oh, who's that? I might know his name. And she said, Simon Vance. And I said, that name, because I said, Where have I heard that before? And then it just so happened that you guys have caught up at exactly the moment that I've been listening to all your stuff on on Audible. So I was just blown away by what a coincidence it was, and what a small world we live in,

Simon Vance

was extraordinary. Well, it's got in a way it got smaller the pandemic help because of sort of people having more time to spend on computers and Facebook and so on. And that's what happened. I think I posted something and your mum saw it and said only you this island dance that we used to play with on the Brighton Beach, consult Dean and stuff. We had cats together and our families were very close. And I kept in touch with a couple of people. There's a girl Penny, who was a great friend of your mom's too. And and of course, you've brought your uncles I was gonna say your brother's No, that's your mom's brothers. That's what they used to come over to our house all the time, our birthday parties and everything else. Amazing. But she got in touch with me and said, and I said, Yeah, let's chat. So we got on and I mean, she's been over there for since the early 70s In New Zealand, and I've been in California for almost exactly 20 years now. 20 years next week, I think. 40 years. At some point, it

Toby Ricketts

doesn't really matter, does it?

Simon Vance

Oh, but anyway, we got in touch a nice fun chat and it was so much fun catching up and then you send me an email. And the funny thing is, it came to me, Toby Ricketts. You know, my mom. Ricketts Ricketts. I don't know any record. Oh, I know New Zealand. That was to Somerville.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, of course. Absolutely. There was the connection. It was just it's amazing how these things come full circle. So you obviously you grew up in Brighton in the UK as a as did I great place to grow up. In terms of audio Becca, like, you know, when when you were growing up? Because lots of people think oh, you've always you've always done audio books. Obviously, you've had an interest from a young age. And you kind of did but there wasn't really much around at that time. Right? There was sort of vinyl records with sort of Richard Burton reading things was what other kind of influences did you have from a young age? Oh,

Simon Vance

the funny thing is, I mean, audiobooks was never going to be a career of mine. It was never a choice. This wasn't an active choice that's sort of backed into it. And became good at it by accident. But I was we growing up in England, born in the 50s. So radio, TV in the 60s, there was a lot of storytelling. Now listening to the voice on the radio, watching, listen, well, there was watch with Mother, listen with mother and re watch with mother lunchtimes, when you're really young Jacko normally was an afternoon show on the BBC. It's around 5pm 15 minutes of an actor sitting there telling stories. So that was an influence on me. I also happen to be very good at reading around during class being able to read and sort of I can have, remember a particular time reading I think, might have been a Joseph Conrad or something and just getting lost in it was about 14 or 15. But never really thinking this is what I'm going to do. I was into being an actor for a lot of time, but never took that seriously until I was in my 30s because it seemed to be a question refer? Well, it was something people played out, it wasn't a serious job. That was my original opinion. My parents were both in the medical profession, and grandparents had been and so on. So I was all set for maybe looking at that nearly became a civil engineering. We talk about that later. But I sort of moved away from it. But I ended up having friends at school Grammar School, in Brighton High School in the States, whatever it was in my teens, whose whose dad worked in the local radio station, and I started in radio. And then I went to London, and joined radio for the National speech channel at the BBC speech based. And he went there, and I followed him, because he went a few years before me, and I thought, Well, if he can do it, I can do it. And it seemed like fun, I enjoyed it. But um, and while I was in London, the RNIB, he worked for the RNIB, this friend who'd gone to radio for before me, he worked for the RNIB Talking Book service for the blind reading books for them for charity. And when I got to London, he'd left he'd gone somewhere else, but I was on my own, and I had a lot of spare time. And I thought, what did he do to fill his time, and I'll do that. So I started reading books for the blind. In the 80s eyeglasses, 1983, I first went up to London, and I started reading for the blind in one afternoon, a week for the whole nine years that I was up there, working for the BBC. And when I came to the States, I was determined to be an actor and I was in, but I didn't go to New York or LA, I was based in San Francisco, and there was a really only theater. So I did a lot of work in theater. But my then brother in law knew somebody who worked in audio books. And if you want to add some extra money to audiobooks, so I did some audiobooks. Or I got signed by this one company, Blackstone audiobooks. And I've been with them ever since. And that was the beginning. But I never ever saw it as a career path. I think that's

Toby Ricketts

something that a lot of my other voiceover artists, including myself, have remarked on that the fact that they always kind of knew it existed as this kind of, you know, Hallowed, you know, imagine being able to, you know, use your voice and get paid for it. I'm because I'm from a radio background as well. And, and there was always a sense that there were these jobs, but it wasn't kind of a real job, like I couldn't, you know, I couldn't go for that. I don't even know how to get into it. And it does seem to be a shared thing that you do, you gain skills along your life, and then suddenly, it just falls into place. And you're doing it and suddenly, like I'm doing it this is this is amazing, which might be different these days. Because there are so many more people, I think wanting to be voice artists these days, that there are more parts that are sort of just laid out for this sort of career that it is a valid career path. But at the same time, there's so much more work around for things like explainer videos and genres that simply didn't exist sort of, you know, five years ago. So it's interesting that, you know, it has changed this whole career and how to get into it.

Simon Vance

Yeah, I mean, as I say, for me, I sort of backed into it accidentally, that worked for me, because I have issues with, you know, wanting to be good at something, if I'm going to be a success at it, I need to be good at it. And I didn't need to be good at audiobooks. I was reading for the blind when I started it. That was my apprenticeship. And I came over and I thought, well, I can do this won't lead to anything. Whereas with acting, it was always a bit of a struggle, because you go into a casting or whatever, what do they want? What do they want? You're always thinking what's what can I do to make an impact. And I never had to do that with audiobooks, because it was never a goal. I got a good friend, Scott brick, who's another very successful audiobook narrator here in California, in Los Angeles, and he talks about wanting to be an audiobook narrator from a young age, younger than me, but he was, you know, that was his goal. Once he recognized it was it was a thing, he decided to go for it. So he took a career path. But me, it's always been a little bit accidental that it wasn't until about 15 years ago that I finally accepted that I was good at it. And I could make it a career and actually backed off doing theater and stuff like that. I'm back in. I'm in Los Angeles now and looking at working in film and TV at some point along the way. But that's yeah, I'm enjoying the audio books have been very good to me, and I've enjoyed them, but it's a complete surprise. But as you say, these days audio books, it's got a much higher profile. You know, I was working it in the 90s and it was just cassettes, then, you know, people driving along with 25 cassettes beside them and slipping one in the car each time and popular thing.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, sales reps that were driving 1000s of miles a week.

Simon Vance

truckers are a huge audience. But you it wasn't until Steve Jobs or whoever the mp3 players and Steve Jobs particularly with the iPod that suddenly it became possible to have a whole book by pressing a button, a single button and suddenly in 2000 234 the business just huge it was growing before that but it just expand

Toby Ricketts

Usually, so that would have been sort of in the middle of your sort of your, your audiobook career so far. And you noticed a real uptick in, in sort of in sales and demand for for actually reading these books.

Simon Vance

Oh, yeah, it was very often down in the early days. I mean, I started I got here in 92. I started doing books either later that year at the beginning of 93. I can't exactly remember. But I was working for Blackstone doing books here. And they're working in theater, mostly. A very good year and 95. I worked in the theater every every week. Around 97 Business dropped off, I was still with only Blackstone. And it was horrifying because I was going through a divorce and separation, not necessarily in that order separation, then divorce. And it just it was it was crippling when when they backed off sending me books, because I didn't have anything else didn't have a lot of theater at that point. And then things started coming back later on. And it was very noticeable. For me. I think I won my first award in the year 2000. Then the next couple of years, and it was, as I say, 2005 Suddenly I had a job. So I stopped doing or doing theater because theater took me away, that was rehearsals every other week and, and so on and so forth. And and some of the audiobooks I was doing in the early days required me to fly to New York or Seattle or somewhere else to do the recording in studios. Because I was mostly recording at home, which is very unusual in the early days in the 90s. There won't be any of us who did that. Yeah. And sort of surrounded by a lot of the mainstream people until they realized, actually, some of these independent guys can do it.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, absolutely. Just going back on a couple of things you said there about, you know, being in the theater and also doing audiobooks. And I've just come from a weekend teaching sort of how to do voiceover and there were some theater or actors in the room. And one of the things I had to tell them was about, you know, when you are doing on stage work, you are, you know, projecting and making everything big, so that in the back seats, they can hear what you're saying. But in audiobooks, it's much more subtle. And so you have to have quite a range in terms of being an actor, and then sort of bringing that back. And, and, you know, I told them to, you know, instead of projecting to the back seats, you're basically performing for the tiny person inside the microphone. If you've got any sort of thoughts on how it differs, you know, theater acting, the audiobook? Well, yeah,

Simon Vance

I mean, for me, I was fortunate because I did do all those years of radio, and broadcasting where you were basically, I and the cliche at the time, then and probably still is, you know, imagine your grandma sitting the other side of the microphone, and you're just talking to her, like, I'm talking to you just that, you know, I'm not gonna project to you told me. Hey, Toby. Yeah. And the difference to some extent, I think, is the the amount of breath support and so on, you know, you're on stage and you've got to project you've got to be Sapele. You can't be storming around Shakespearian, like all the times, you've got to be sat on that you so you give him more support. You don't have to do that the breath control is very more nuanced in the studio. It's much gentler, and yeah,

Toby Ricketts

because the mics up everything to listen, you know, it's a very sensitive instrument.

Simon Vance

Indeed, indeed, yes. You have to be careful. And it's, it's so storytelling is so gentle

Toby Ricketts

trust exercise, in a way, isn't it? Like you're really you're creating a world and inviting someone into that world? And it's quite a responsibility, I think.

Simon Vance

Yeah, yeah. It's funny thing. I mean, I I can happily I can listen to myself. We're not you don't not listening to my not listen to my voice. I mean, there's a that's a thing you find with some new people in the industry and some older ones, perhaps, but, you know, I've got a wonderful voice, and I've listened to you can tell they're sort of enjoying the sound. I'm doing wonderful things with orders. And, but I'm listening, I'm listening to the story. So I'm, I'm actually I found myself I wouldn't necessarily I don't coach people. And I wouldn't coach them to say, well, you know, see how your story sounds to yourself. But there is a way in which I'm listening. On some level, I'm listening to myself, am I making sense? Does this serve the story or not? And I can tell when sort of when it becomes false when I'm drifting or, or pushing or, or whatever. And so that while you know, you're putting the audience out there, or the one person you're talking to, that one person is in my head at the same time? I'm sorry, in some strange way.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, yeah. Before we leave the, the sort of, you know, your history and how you got into audiobooks. It's like I see, I definitely see that there's a something in common with my career and in terms of you know, you were able to do many years of practice. In a real situation you're reading for the blind, so you're basically doing audiobooks but without the pay, but getting that practice, practice practice which we I was talking about in voiceover training. And then it's a kind of a slow start, it's a very slow curve up, you get some books. And then as soon as something like an award happens, it seems to sort of go exponential. And then it's sort of like the world is your oyster. And you, you, you you learn at an exponential rate. Would you say that? That's sort of how it's happened then? And what happens after that? Does it sort of plateau? Does it keep on going? Is it can you just do what you want? At that point?

Simon Vance

I'm on the downward slope. It's, it's really interesting thing, it's one of the things I have a problem with, when I'm when people ask me, you know, how do you how do you work? How do you get in the industry and so on and so forth? How does it grow? Because I came into it in a different way. I way that people don't, as you explained it, you know, I did my apprenticeship for eight years, and there was no pressure, no pressure at all. These days, you come into the industry, and it's almost like you got to be hot, the moment you open your mouth, you know, people rush into books, and they take on more than they can handle in. And it's, it's, it's almost like with with auditioning, well, you get sort of one chance as it were. And if you if you don't nail it, the first time, the fear is, you're not going to get a second chance. And I had a lot of chances to nail that to grow and stuff. And I may, or may have had a gift to begin with, you know, so So I was fortunate in that respect. So I didn't need to learn, although I have heard some of my books from the 80s. There's a couple. I did a RNIB that they sold to Audible UK, and they're available, but I made sure they put them under a different name. And I'm not going to tell you what it is. Because I've heard Okay, that was a beginners voice. listen to voices books I've done 20 years ago, and there's a slight, you know, I said little squirmy Enos about it. Well, that's a good

Toby Ricketts

thing, in a way, isn't it? Because I mean, if you're not if you're not getting better, and it's nice to see the progression,

Simon Vance

in terms of how it how it went, you know, for me, it was again, no pressure for the years that I was working here commercially, because it was something filling in the time or a little bit of money on the side, because acting on the stage was my thing. And it was very gentle. And it started to take off, I won the first award, it was one of these earphone awards about a pile of them here, they kind of this the spare room and fold. Let me just go into the wall here. audiofile magazine, which is a US magazine that does a great job of promoting and reviewing, I send these out to new readers every so often couple every month or excellence. And it's just a nice alarm to have. And I got my first one in 2000. And and I wouldn't have said I noticed a big change that I won my first od in 2006. And that's the sort of the Oscars of the audiobook industry over here. Pretend

Toby Ricketts

I'm not quite as good.

Simon Vance

But it's very flattering. I mean, it's phenomenal. And I won my first one of five or six and it does help you with the business, the business and audiobooks as it's changed over the years it was still growing then, in 2011, or 12. Audible bought, audible was bought by Amazon. Audible had started up as being just a distributor of audio books a sort of central place on the internet that people could download them. So all the publishers sort of gave this that didn't give their stuff but they channeled it through audible. And inaudible started doing what they said they weren't going to do in the first place. And that's produced your own audiobooks. And everybody got very uptight and audible got bigger and bigger became the, you know, the elephant in the room, taking up all of all the oxygen and and then Amazon bought them and started using the unload masses of titles. They wanted everything on audio. So around 2000 Whatever it was 1112 13 they demanded of the publishers or producers rather producers, they wanted to bring in as many of these books as possible. So everybody in their grandmother got the chance to do audiobooks on the standards just dropped. It was a bad few years. In retrospect, business actually dropped off, because the main publishers, the people that I did work for and paid me in a regular union rates. They weren't putting so many books out because they are audio and took a few years to recover. And the milk amongst those narrators who came in who weren't perhaps experienced the milk, roaster chop and some extraordinarily good narrators that came from that. And I think things have leveled out now in the last few years. I think it took three or four or five, six years for the for the business to really settle. Because even given my level of award winning I was I had gaps in my lots of gaps in my schedule. I got very depressed Time's about, you know, the work, because it wasn't happening. And but it's it's come back in the last few years. And it's an it's continued to expand now, but it's all a little more sensible than it was a decade or so ago. Right. But it's been up and down, it hasn't been a direct, you know, like that. Yeah, sort of, oh, this is good, or this is bad, or this is always good. And then it's, it's sort of come up now. And I think we're on a steady trajectory. I'm, I'm having to turn down books. Now position to be, yeah, it's a good thing to be. And unfortunately, it's all others story. I've got his name names, but there's a publisher that sends me some fantasy books, which were great at the time, but they've gone on too long. They're not very well written the self published things, they got an audience. And I don't want to not be authors, because it's my God, being an author is incredible, but they're not my cup of tea. I'm locked into this series. Now, I've had a I had a 27 hour book and a 17 hour book, and I just today started another 27 alcohol for the same publisher. They're all of the same sort of nother fantasy. And I've had to turn down books from publishers I love with really good books that, you know.

Toby Ricketts

It's funny how, you know, being a, sort of a subcontractor life or being self employed, and does have such ebbs and flows. And I've had to, you know, counsel, a few sort of voiceover artists on that kind of slight word upward trajectory that you will have weeks when no one calls you. And it's not the end of the world. It's like it's the time to do your marketing. And like it does does seem to pick up as long as you put if you start putting the time in to to promoting yourself into finding new ways to work. But it can be quite disheartening, I think. And it's nice to hear from someone with so much experience that that happens to even you with the awards. You know,

Simon Vance

it's just that I remember John Cleese getting very frustrated because people were looking for John Cleese types. He goes through the career of a of an actor or something like that, you know, then it would go through various things. Give me John Cleese. And it will give me a John Cleese type. And then John Cleese is going but what about me? And I think I feared that was a time when give me somebody give me a sign advance type because him signing events is too busy. We won't have time it was a lot of assumptions on the way that sounds do business. Right? I'd have to keep going out and reminded me, you know, I got some space here. Yeah, I've got some time if you've got anything for me. But you're right. It's about communicating, being in touch with publishers and the industry as a whole and keep reminding them that you're there even at my level, you know, forget. Oh, he's okay. He doesn't need work.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Yeah. All right. Let's switch gears a little bit and talk about some specific projects is basically just me like having a slight fanboy because I want to peek behind the curtain. The two I mentioned at the start, which the the Sandman series from which is on Audible, which is just such an it's one of the best dramatic productions audio only dramatic practice I've ever heard this, that the the level of acting and the level of production is just it blew my mind when I was into it. So do look. If you're into the surf, then do do look it up. What was the process? Because there's a lot of dialogue in that. And I can't imagine they got everyone together in the same studio. So once that managed from afar, and was it live directed sessions, did you have to travel? How did that sort of turn out?

Simon Vance

Oh, gosh, I think a few years because I only have a few lines in the first one and add more in the second one. They're different because the second one was right in the middle of the pandemic. First one. Well, here's the thing I get on very well with the director, duck Max, producer, director and fantastic Medusa. Oh, god, he's incredible. He and I, he's a classic Skype warning. I don't he's born but he was. He went into a friend's same grammar school as a friend of mine was taught by my friends. It's a small world stuff. I mean, he could go in detail and stuff like that, but I bumped into him at at one of the audio awards. And we got chatting has a lot in common. And I also happen to know Neil Gaiman so that was that was helpful. And, and we he hired me for it. And I was I wanted to do it over there. He's willing to let me do it from here remotely. But never on any occasion. Have I been in the studio with anybody else? Well, other friends report. So who's another audiobook narrator extraordinary artists. Brilliant. Okay. Nothing else. He's done a lot of good stuff. He lives a couple of miles from here. But he he went into the studio with Michael Sheen was there, Neil was there. Three or four other British actors were there and he had a phenomenal time for his week, but he did some great Ghibli Gilbert I think in the first season, and it's just phenomenal work that he does. He's a very talented guy, but he got the pleasure to meet of meeting people but I went there and it just happened to coincide with a couple of days after my mum died, but I booked it so I went in and did it. But that was the first Lucien the librarian session that I did. And I just sat at a microphone and done I sat beside me, and he read the other lines, and we let the guy you know, I respond, but he'd say he knew what I think. When he was James McAvoy so he I don't know if he'd recorded James at that point. But he, he knew how it was going to be. So he gave me He fed me the lines, and I responded. That was the first season or first act, act two and act three I did here. This is my studio.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, we're gonna get into that a bit later. I'll ask you some questions.

Simon Vance

And, and I just I think we did it remotely. Yeah, we did it. What's the subject?

Toby Ricketts

or something? Yeah, yeah. No,

Simon Vance

you're talking about voiceover Thank you. So we did voice source connect, and with a studio in London. And, again, he read the lines, and I responded with a suitable space, they knew what he likes. There's one part of act three that I did a whole sequence I knew was coming up, he wasn't sure if it was going to be included or not, I can't remember it depended on their choice of what they were going to do, which episodes and so on. And I thought, You know what, I'm gonna go in the studio and have a go just for the heck of one morning I woke up and I thought, Oh, my voice feels good. Ladies with VoiceOver, you know, something that you wake up? Oh, I sound good this morning. So I went in the studio because it was a like a 20 minute read or something like that. And I just launched into it. And I sent it to him. And I said, you know, if you want to use this, I'll do it again. And it came around that they then decided they were going to use that scene. And I thought, you know, Were you okay with that you want the other goes? And he said, Well, why don't we think about this accident or this axis? I went back in the student I did about four or five times more, way more than he needed. And he actually I think he's using the original.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, then some of them away. There's something in that first read that just is fresh. And yeah. And probably your interpretation as well.

Simon Vance

Yeah. And that was not resource Connect. There was just me doing it right. off my back. Because I'm a storyteller. I read books. I don't have a producer in my ear all the time. Yeah. So

Toby Ricketts

more comfortable. Exactly. And the other one I want to pick your brain about was was the the first book in dune because you've been the the narrator for the series in June, that must have picked up in popularity over the last couple of years with with veal nerves, beautiful film that has just come out recently. There were a few interesting things about the production of doom, though, that I found interesting. And I don't I'm not the production because I think it was a fantastic production and your parts were just absolutely sublime. But it differed from other audio books in that it was a mixture of single Narrator doing characters and other chapters were actors doing scenes with narrator in between. And I wonder whether they explained what that how that was going to work to you or or any kind of, you know, detail about how that occurred.

Simon Vance

It's an interesting thing. I think they do a much better job on it today, because I think people are much more experienced in the industry with with multiple voice or whatever they want to do. I'm not sure what their decision was based on. I'm not sure whether the people who did it and I know them at a distance. I've met them. And they're good producers, but they decided to split it so that you know, and I don't know what the thought process was on what scenes are we going to make, like audio drama as it were and what scenes we're going to have single Narrator I got a script saying these are your bits to read. So I went through that and it was great because Scott brick who does some of that who does the voice and he plays portrayed is in the originals and he's he's worked a lot on the dune books with the with Brian's Franco but son Brian, and he got from him. Before we did this, he got all the pronunciations, right? Yeah, all the authentic pronunciations, not like the, the movie was made way back in the 80s, which had all the wrong pronunciations in it. And Frank Herbert was a pocket POC, elliptic, or at least very disappointed anyway. But we had all the right pronunciations. But so we got all the list and pronunciation stuff like that. I just recorded my bit. I wanted to hear what the other voices were doing. Because from my from my point of view, and it's been pointed out to me, sometimes I do a voice because I like to not make a huge character thing. I don't overdo voices, unless it's Dickens or something, and you know, but I want to differentiate them when I give them a sort of voice or accent or whatever. And of course, that wouldn't be when they did the scenes, that wouldn't be the voice of the actor, it is one

Toby Ricketts

interpretation, isn't it? You know, it's two people having a go at the same character, you're going to get a different result. And without those interacting, it's going to be a different result.

Simon Vance

I've never gone back and listened to it. And I'm sorry, I sort I think I'd be too critical of it because it was a little bit of a failing on my part, perhaps or, you know, but it wasn't offered that I should have done some more research on who's Playing what and how are they doing? And I'm not sure any of the actors would have been able to tell me because

Toby Ricketts

I don't I don't think so I think your your parts were absolutely fantastic and your interpretations of the characters were bang on so I think you I think you did a fantastic job in that

Simon Vance

interesting and it's has been successfully one it was my second or third Adi back in the day. And yes, I didn't get because I have a Google alerts if my name pops up somewhere in the world. And months, it was like, you know, the list of best selling audiobooks or something and Dune was was

Toby Ricketts

up there. Yeah, yeah. Because I mean, I mean, I only bring it up because he like when I listen to audiobooks, I am hypercritical, because I'm thinking if I was doing this, how would I do it? And like what, you know, what does this all mean? Whereas I'm not. It's difficult when you're in the industry to become completely immersed in it because you're constantly do, do you listen to audiobooks? And do you find it difficult? In terms of you're constantly kind of interrogating the production?

Simon Vance

Well, I don't listen to what I bet very rarely these days, there was a period when I drive, we had a, we originally lived in the Bay Area, San Francisco, my wife and I and my wife has been teaching at UC Irvine down in Orange County for the last 15 years. And eight years ago, we moved down here partially about for about three or four years. We had a house up there and we had a small rental down here. So that will bring together all week she was flying down once a week and flying back. And I was trying, I was exploring Los Angeles and movie work and stuff. And I drive the five or six hours. And because of a very good friend of mine, Grover gardener, who's been in audiobooks about as long as I have. And he does wonderful biographies and stuff, Carnegie and you know, Rockefeller, and all the rest of it, and I love those. Also, around the time, or maybe even bit before that I love I listened to some of Scott's books, because he's a friend. And there was a lovely woman, Kate Fleming, who sadly died. But I was I knew her well. And I listened to some of hers. And I listen to a couple of other books. But like you, it's hard for me to listen. Because I'm if I because most of the people in the industry I know. I mean, I listened to some. I did enjoy listening to books. There are a couple of British actors I liked. And I can't remember the names now. But they did some classics that I enjoyed, that I hadn't done. I didn't mind listening. But no, I I tend not to because it's difficult. And also, I haven't got the time. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

exactly. If you're not commuting or doing some kind of long distance or, or yard work, which is my favorite time to listen to audiobooks. And you know, I found I mean, I actually have the opposite effect as well. Sometimes when I find someone who's so good, and I like so much that it actually starts to give me other strings to my bow, I find I start to learn things from them through their interpretations. And Derek Perkins is one of those who who's done a number of audiobooks who I nonfiction, and I just I loved his nonfiction delivery and really took lots of inspiration from it in a way. So it's kind of it can be, can be quite freeing in a way and to find new ways of doing things. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Do you happen to sort of have a favorites? Or do you have genres that you sort of specialize in? Be it fiction or nonfiction? You sort of pigeon holed? Or do you try and keep it nice and broad so that you are applicable to more chops.

Simon Vance

I'd like to keep it broad I did. Because when I came into the industry, we did everything. In early 90s. I got everything. A lot of things quite rightfully are now going to people who are more appropriate for the characters and for the parts and so on and so forth. I think what I did was was good. It was never a caricature and stuff like that. I remember doing a piece an author had written the piece set in the Caribbean was an English, it was like five different characters, and one was an English detective, and there was some locals and stuff. So I researched accents and did the modern, the author was so impressed and loved what I done. But I'd never be asked to do that kind of book now, quite frankly, looking at things differently now. So, but I did everything. I do get concerned apart. Partly three, three fantasy books in a row is driving me crazy. I don't want any more of these. I just don't do them anymore. And there's it's just one publisher, and that's basically a lot of what they do is self published books. But for my main people, they send me everything across the board. Of course being English. I did all the Charles Dickens and you know,

Toby Ricketts

great expectations. I think it in Sherlock Holmes.

Simon Vance

Sherlock Holmes. Yeah, yeah, a lot of love that stuff. Yeah, I mean, it's, I've done so many books. People say well, what's your favorite? I know you're probably gonna

Toby Ricketts

just put a line through that question.

Simon Vance

I don't know. I mean, yeah, we'll get to that question. Yeah, I've got a few that I've really enjoyed over the years. But yeah, I'm actually trawl up and all the rest of it. I've done all those Thomas Hardy's and stuff. I mean, there's still probably some I haven't done back in the day you see back in the 90s and the aughts. And before it really took off. Most of the the audience, the customer base was libraries. That was where they were aiming. So it was all the classics. These days, it is changed so that it's new books, any new book has got to have an audio version. So that's where the pressure is now. Which is a shame, because I think there's still a lot of classic books out there that I would love

Toby Ricketts

to do. Yeah, especially movies, when there's movies involved as well. Like,

Simon Vance

pick him up. Yeah, I mean, if there's something they'll pick it up, you know, so it'll get get pushed and so on. But yeah, the new books definitely. Yeah, they want them done yesterday.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, totally. So going into some sort of the craft the tech in the business of this is kind of the the, the business end of the of the discussion where we talk about the different sort of components that make up a sort of a you know, your, your method with when it comes to characters because characters are a big part of fictional audiobooks, possibly non fictional, but not not generally. What's your method in terms of how do you keep it consistent? Do you go through and do all the character lines at the same time they could do it or that kind of thing? Do you research accents? Do you engage with the author to say how they'd like it done? Was it just your interpretation? What kind of is your approach? All of the above? That was easy.

Simon Vance

Moving on. Let me see what just you threw in the thing about nonfiction and it's one of the rules is really generally speaking, you don't cook put voices on nonfiction because you're trying to do real people. So you know, there's been a time there have been times when it's okay, you know, Chilean butchers talk like that. And we have had them on the beach where you don't want to overdo it. But the things like that, but often you got big up people from around the world presidents prime ministers, whatever, and kings and queens you don't want to be if they're in quotes. You don't want to give them voices because it's just distracting. So that's one of the rules that whenever I say rules, I always remember Prunella scales and actress in Britain, who played Basil Fawlty, his wife and Fawlty Towers, wonderful. Timothy West's wife, Samuel West's mother. She said, she gave me a list of things for spoken English and poetry, one of the things at the top of both them was these, these rules are for the sake of making sense, and so on and so forth. Also break these rules for the sense of making sense and whatever. So there are no rules. So when I say a rule is you can break it, but is it guide the way of starting in character voices? Yeah, I mean, I remember we're just going back and going back to the beginning, when I did audiobooks for the blind, sitting in the green room, with actors on the west end, I was in radio, and there were people from radio for three and four and an actor's and stuff. Sitting around, there was one fellow who insisted no character voices whatsoever, he was one of the old school. And that was a that was prevalent for some time, even here, I think. But uh, but generally speaking, I was always somebody who loved putting character voices in and, you know, for the way the book for the book to make sense. Because quite often, you have a long page of dialogue, and you don't know who said what, and unless you give them a little bit of on, if you've got the page in front of you, you can reference back and go, that's him speaking or, you know, you get a sense of what they're saying they give you a guide to who it is who's speaking, but I think carrier devices help and the thing about audiobooks is I don't want to get I don't have my audience thinking too hard about things like that. So I want it to flow I want people to understand and to be keep with me, you know, not, I don't read fast, but I read faster than some, but I like to keep it you know, so that they can follow the thread. So that's the main reason for doing character voices. Now how i i do them. I tend to I know Jim Dale, who is an extraordinary narrator and he did all the Harry Potter's over here, the US Harry Potter's Stephen Fry did the ones in the UK but Jim Dale would break down the characters before he even starts the book, and he'll work on the voices before he even starts the book. I tend to and I think that's a wonderful way of doing things very organized, but I'm not very awkward to entertain my guide from the moment I know I understand who the people are I understand the background. I was mentioned Dickens here because he always did a wonderful thing where he named his characters in a certain way Mr. Jolly so you know. Yeah, this is there's often a little clue in that but also they often spend a paragraph describing before they open their mouth, and as an actor, that's all gone. I mean, it's just wonderful. It feeds you and, and then I open my mouth and what comes out is what comes out in the moment most of the time. And I don't at that point, I get an idea in my head of what they look like. Mm hmm. Sometimes it's it's not so much these one though still these days. I'd actually put a face on it as an actor if I'm doing an Alec Guinness face. I can't I did not used to quote this. Some say Alec Guinness because I could do an Alec Guinness ish voice. Like think of this kind of school teacher was not a Guinness type. No, me doing an Alec Guinness voice you probably wouldn't know it was Alec Guinness. But that doesn't matter. Hmm. John Wayne voice it may not sound like John Wayne or something. But in my head. It's what comes out.

Toby Ricketts

It's an attitude.

Simon Vance

I hope I don't. character isn't attitude. It's also the way I nail the name onto that guy's forehead reference. Yeah. So he's kind of a visual reference, you know? Yeah. So it's, you know, 20 chapters later on and go, Oh, that was Alec Guinness. You know, when when Dr. Smith walks into the room again, oh, it's Alec Guinness. And I've got the voice. It's there. And that's that's the way it is, if you're doing one book, I have to talk about this. Because I'm doing this, as I say, this fantasy book, which is a fifth in a series. And I haven't done one of these in about a year and a bit. So I had to go through the script and find all the people who opened their mouths by reference, the old ones. In the first nine chapters, there's like two and a half pages of names, but 80 names, and then I go back to the other books and match up the voices. I use their eyes, and it slowly comes back to me. And I remember people who are organized, make voice files at the time, right? Yeah, yeah. Yeah. And you look great on that. And I actually, I have done it on times. And then I lose the voice voice file. Because it's two years between books. And I go, where did that one go? I thought I kept I guess I didn't save it. I guess I trashed it along with something else. So but but generally, the way I I remember them during the book is that I see the actors on the stage.

Toby Ricketts

Hmm, interesting. And do you as part of your sort of research? Do you cold read books? Or do you pre read them? So that you know what's coming up effectively?

Simon Vance

Yeah, I did, like various the golden rule, when you're beginning audiobooks for a beginner is read everything, read it, at least once

Toby Ricketts

pre read it. So So get familiar with the text? Yeah, yeah.

Simon Vance

And I don't do that. And I've never been one to go in detail, except to the two different things. One is, when I had to go to a studio, and I had a producer, or a director and an engineer or something they're relying on me Time is of essence, I would pre read the book, so I knew what was going on. Because otherwise you're wasting people's time. If you're sitting back knowing now, what shall I do here? The other occasion is, if it is a mystery, I need to know who the good guys and bad guys are. If it's if it's a real sort of thriller of that kind, it's crucial to know that most books you know, I don't wing it. I mean, things like the dickens and the trollops on the Hardys. I would actually get quick notes. You know, the SparkNotes. Always and then just go through Oh, yeah, okay. Okay.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, quick, catchy cheat.

Simon Vance

Yeah, I saw a thread on Facebook. I didn't go on very much these days. But I saw a thread where somebody is going on, I'm starting in this business, I'm, I'm reading my books two or three times I've heard somebody say they read it four or five times how many times you think I should read it? Like, no, no, no, stop, stop. I get it. I get it. People are nervous about that. And I think you need to read it as many times as you need to be comfortable. I happen to be a good sight reader. I trust my instincts. I've been doing it for so many years, you know, 40 years or something. So I trust my instincts. So I can I can jump on a page, and I'm into it and give me a few clues about the character and boom, I can do the voices. Also, as I said, if I'm in a studio, I will pre read and plan stuff much more if I'm here, which is 99% of the time. I've got time to if I get into a chapter and I've I've given somebody a voice that I suddenly don't like I can go back and start again. Just me it's just my time. I'm the one who's penalized by my sloppiness. That said, as I say, if you're a beginner, it really pays to to do the research and to you know, have a good idea in your head, as I say until you feel comfortable. And if that's one reading, go with it if you don't because somebody else done something in a certain way doesn't mean you have to do it that way you can experiment. I think that's a good thing. And that's the thing about teaching. You know, this is the experience of the teacher that takes, in my experience, it takes somebody to two readings to really get comfortable with it. Try it. And if that's too much, for me, I like. And this is a lazy man's argument, I suppose. But I like the sense of surprise. And I know, as actors, we can be surprised every night of the week with the same lines in a play. So, you know, it's an acting skill to be surprised, but I still like for my to feed me. Otherwise, books become very dull and boring. If I've read three times I read every book three times before I get in front of the microphone. I will not enjoy this work.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. And you'll be able to hear that in your voice. Yeah, I'm more likely that

Simon Vance

than the fact that yeah, that because I can, you know, yeah, yeah, it's that I don't think the fact that I am acting surprised. Yeah, you'll hear it. Yeah.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, I one of the best quotes I I ever heard was be prepared, but not rehearsed, is that rehearsal thing kind of gets rid of some of the energy that you bring to a text when you first are interrogating it, it's got that

Simon Vance

reading, you know, when you driving, you begin driving and you you behind the wheel, and you're looking about two yards down the road, or meters, depending on what system you're using. And it's really how gardening, because, and then you get to a corner and get, Oh, I get to sit in the corner.

Toby Ricketts

Everything about everything. Yeah, everything. Whereas,

Simon Vance

you know, as a driver of years experience, you're looking way down the road. And as a narrator, that's sort of the way you've got to be, you can't be looking at the words. It's a weird thing to say this, but you I'm not reading the words, I'm looking beyond the words absolutely being processed in the brain, because that's the way you get to what's beyond? Well, there's, there's a whole world beyond that the words are basically suggesting, and the way through to the author's mind is that way, but if you're plugging each word in, this is where you get the awful beginners thing of emphasizing too many words. That's that's one thing. And, and, you know, emphasizing every v and a, you know, instead of going Oh, yeah. You know, people just get that will express every single word.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. So it's more about, you know, taking a step back and trying to get, like, communicate concepts, rather than the language itself. Like the language is just a vehicle for the concept. And it's, it's worth, you know, trying to say, yeah, yeah, very good. Very good. And just quickly, do you have much contact with authors at all? Because I imagine people think that you're, you know, sitting down having coffees with the authors every morning before you start recording, but it's probably not the case. For many if not,

Simon Vance

some of them. I mean, it's difficult. Dickens has never answered any of my emails. But when they're alive, they're usually very happy to chat, discuss things. And I do like to be in touch if I can be. Publishers are very careful. They don't want to rate us they don't. They're generally protective of that separation. Yeah, they like to be the middle people. And I totally understand that. That said, I've been around long enough. I just want to talk to the author. I mean, trust me, trust me, man. I'll be okay. You know, I'm not gonna embarrass you. But part of the part of the issue was, I don't know if it's still the case now. But they used to get upset because narrators would call an author directly, and the author go will go, Oh, I didn't know that. Make an audible. I wanted to read this. And then issues, publisher and whatever. So that was one of the reasons for having that boundary between you. I've always liked to contact the author if the book needs it.

Toby Ricketts

For pronunciations, and for context, perhaps

Simon Vance

just Yeah, I. I think I mean, I'm thinking specifically of the book I did. I did the prestige by Christopher Priest, it was made into a, he's a wonderful author and was a friend for years, I sort of lost touch with him, he moved off to the west country in England, and I haven't seen him for years, but I did the prestige. And I tried to contact him, and it didn't get any response. And it's basically I think there's three, four different, I think, five, again, five characters. And I don't want to give away a story, but I launched into it because I couldn't get in touch with them. And I was quite a long way through. It's only a seven hour but now it's four or five hours, when he finally came back to me. So sorry, I was traveling in France. And I had a phone call with him. And he gave me such I can't even remember the details of it, but he gave me a different perspective on it. I just threw out everything I'd done and started again. I don't do that very often because it was time consuming. But that was extraordinarily useful. pronounciation is obvious. I have a lot of time. I've spent a lot of time on the phone with people or emailed them generally. And got a long list of pronunciations that's often with the fantasy books and stuff like that. And, you know, some good friendships that come out of that. I'm doing the book after this one is by one of my favorite living authors guy, Gavriel Kay who's just, I love his writing. I just love it. And I can't remember how when we first met, but I ended up he, he's sets up in different parts of the world and writes for, you know, a month or something. And he was in Monterey, and I went, my wife and I went down and stayed overnight. And he introduced me to the Negroni cocktail. This was many groaning No, I won't go. And I'll give you the recipe. Oh, it's um, and I'm his sort of go to VI. He insists on me for all his books. And this next one is a joy. And that's actually one that is not complex or anything? Well, it's not a simple book. But I am sitting and reading it ahead of time. Whereas I wouldn't necessarily put the time aside in the detail of this one, just because it's such a, it's a really deep book, and I want to get it right. And it's personal. It's personal. Yeah, yeah. But I will always I will reach out if the author's alive and is interested in chatting, I will try to contact them and get some because they can give you insights and so on. Beyond pronunciations, and stuff, I am pronunciations quite often just you send a list to the publisher and they send a list to the author who then sends it back. I'd like the author to read them actually.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. I was gonna say cuz I mean, it's it's horrible trying to get a phonetic version because of course, in different accents, phonetics have completely different meanings. So it's, it's a challenge. So moving on to the technology, the tech space, because you record a lot of your own stuff, you run your own studio, I can see in the background I can like I like to see what I can get in the background. You You used to have a Whisper Room, I think or something like that. And your videos on your website, you have a sort of one of those booths with a window and stuff. But that looks like more like an inbuilt one. Now. This is my, this is some of the

Simon Vance

cool secrets. No, this is this. This whole room was built. Two years ago, see my forehead. This is this is how I used to talk to my mother on Zoom was always like this. Yeah, I had this built in the garden. It was actually completed two years ago, almost exactly. This, I'd head up north in San Francisco, and it's a six by four vocal booth. So it is exactly as you say, one with a window in it. Yeah. And it fits nicely in the middle here.

Toby Ricketts

Oh, that's nice. And then inside of the big room, air conditioning duct as well, which is which many people would be like, I wish I had good air conditioning but important for you.

Simon Vance

Well, there are times it hasn't. I mean, I bought the on the top there there is that that box? Yeah, that box there on the top there is the is the sort of allows air in and out as a filter sort of keeps the sound. It was never that successful. But I managed to insulate it. This it goes in in one of these one of these boxes here and out on one of the others. The room itself is pretty cool. I have a mini mini vac. I think they call it on the wall up there. Yeah, which I can run and it makes barely any noise. So that's good. Yeah. So by the time this is a double walled booth. So by the time I'm in here, I kind of put a light on

Toby Ricketts

you. And you got the is that a UAC seven.

Simon Vance

It's a UID seven the story behind that I had a I started off with a $50 shore 30 years ago, and I ended up going to a nine month TLM 103, which is pretty standard. And I found that what I found it allowed too much sort of surrounding noise and it didn't please me a hugely I went with a Sennheiser 416. Is that is that that's on now. And again, I liked it because that is what I experienced at Blackstone audio studios when I went out there some time to record and I thought it was nice and clean. But it's clean.

Toby Ricketts

Exactly. It's very, it's kind of harsh.

Simon Vance

So I started looking around and I had a couple of other ones I tested and then I thought oh, I'll try the u 87. I hope you got I don't like it because it's expensive.

Toby Ricketts

Here. There it is. Exactly. Mine's in my drawer at the moment because I actually bought one on that basis. And I tried on my studio and it just doesn't sound good in this room. But I'm building a new studio, which will be open in the next month. And I hope I really hope since I've invested in this mic that it's going to it's it's going to sound good because I found it was it was picking up again too much ambience of this room and that the forensics is so much more directional. So that was working better. But um, but yeah, do you do you enjoy the technology behind studios and recording?

Simon Vance

Um, yeah, in a way. I mean, I'm not. I'm definitely not technophobic. I love it. I just don't remember. So Matt, you know, you set something up, you know, I've got my I got stuff here. This is I got a Mac Mini on Apollo's two with twin solo, whatever it is, I actually use a grace. That's the one the M one of three. I've got PreSonus this is one, the ADL 700 valve one which I'd actually don't use, right? Yeah. But he wants to buy one. Yeah, so I've got that's what the thing is, I you set these things up and you get them working. And then five years later on something goes wrong going, how on earth did I do that? Yeah.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. And I mean, consistency is a massive thing. If they want to come and do a chapter or or an update or something, then sometimes, you know, it's, I suppose you basically deliver them as one thing and then that's it. You know, you very rarely would you

Simon Vance

changes. I mean, I never change. I've never changed my settings. Yeah, they were set years ago. You know, if I brushed against it and knocked all the things, I'd be like, Oh, my God, how did I I think I did photographic once a few years ago. But no, I mean, in terms because I have to do pickups, I have to do corrections that have to fit into the book. So basically, I don't I never change it. I experimented with various different positions on the microphone. And then

Toby Ricketts

and we're sitting on the on the u 87. The cardioid pattern or figure eight or the Omni?

Simon Vance

I'm saying that sort of thing.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, the kidneys sort of shaped one. And what some audio software are using to run cuz I didn't recognize it from the videos on the website. Yeah.

Simon Vance

Well, this is back when because I think I was one of the first people to use to record directly to a computer because we used dat and a well cassettes, in 9394 cassettes, audio cassettes, and then that and then I know some people went to a dat I didn't, I went straight to a hard drive in 1996 because I was just going through the separation and I needed an I thought I'll try this because I I do love the technical side of things. I love experimenting with things like that when I can. So I got one, it was like a four megabyte RAM, and 120 gigabyte now 120 megabyte hard drive, you know, and it will take, I'd record for an hour, and it will take half an hour to save their dog in 1996 97 and a half an hour, I'd finished recording my hour, set it to save it and I'd walk away and hope we didn't have a power outage or anything. But But at that time, I was looking for the software. And it was like I didn't know, there was no internet to go and ask I think I did have a worldwide web box or something that allowed me to access but nobody, there was nobody selling anything, anything no advice. And I went into a music store and they sold me Cubase which is a music editing software, which had as a tiny part of it Wavelab 1.0. And both Wavelab 1.0. And I stayed with Steinberg ever since. So this is Steinberg's or something?

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, so I've definitely heard of people using Wavelab it's uncommon, but it's not unheard of.

Simon Vance

I really liked it. And I I've tried to go with Pro Tools from time to

Toby Ricketts

time Pro Tools is too complicated for most complicated and

Simon Vance

it never did. And I don't, I don't know, if you well, you know, there's I record straight, I do not, I don't do punch and roll, rock and roll or whatever they call it. I tried that at times. But my argument about sticking with it is I have more control this way. Because I'm I worked in radio for years. So I edited tapes with a little razor blade, and so on. And so I know to listen for where you can edit.

Toby Ricketts

Totally, yeah, that's such a skill. And it's, it's almost becomes an instinct, like because I'm the same now I've a very specific way of doing of doing cuts and, and I can almost edit without listening now because I know the shape of my voice and where I will pick up from etc. So,

Simon Vance

so it's, you know, the little yellow pencil back in the day, but I. So I find that with Pro Tools, you know, you've got to consolidate the thing afterwards, and it does the crossfades. And you really have very little control over you know, you might cut half breaths and all the rest of it, which is what the publishers you'd take these in, the engineers will then be cleaning up. But also you end up using the last take, I mean, I know there's options because it stores them all on the side. When you do retakes and stuff like that. You can send the whole package but with uh with this, if I I can edit like you say I can edit in the middle of sentences on C's and D's and F's and Ks and all the rest of it and the very beginning of words middle. But also if I do three takes of a sentence say I can take the beginning of the second sentence and the you know, the end of the second sentence or the beginning of the third take and put them together and I can clean it up that way if it's yes, most of the time. I'm just doing straight edits.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, I'm exactly the same. I just use the to track editor and then just keep it simple. And then and you have a method of noting visually when you make a mistake like a like a click or a dog click or something.

Simon Vance

I have a I don't even see on here. But if I put a little a on here, because that's tomorrow's file I'm going to do I get a little modified. If I record Yeah, so that's, that's it in record. And I've got a little Marker button on the side, it's over here. It's gone. I'll just drop the marker, I'll make a fluff. Yeah, I'll do that now. Do it again, or whatever. I mean, when I stop that out of the way, there's a couple of yellow markers on the right. Yeah. There's, I've got so you know, my I added on my iMac over there. And I've got a programmed mouse, and I just hit one button, and it jumps to the next marker. Oh, that's great. Yeah. another button that erases it cuts it out. I've got various shortcuts, which makes editing really quick. I'm very absolutely

Toby Ricketts

as long as you are disciplined enough and, and have programmed yourself to actually when you do mistake, put those in because it takes a while to build up the instinct of like, I've made a mistake. I'll do this. And then later on, I'll know exactly what it is.

Simon Vance

Well, the hardest part and I still deal with it is, you know, the when you've got the record thing up there, it's a very small little corner, little button to press that. Does it mean, sometimes the mouse drifts off? So I'll think I'm clicking it or not. And the publishers fortunately know that from me occasionally. And they know I do that. And it's very straightforward. Retake Yes.

Toby Ricketts

So you you kind of have options, depending on who you're working with, don't you whether you provide just the raw session, whether you do edited versions, as well as increase the time obviously, sit back over here. Yeah, by all means.

Simon Vance

Everything the Yeah, I. Yeah, I mostly do the editing. It's rare. I think there are a few occasions when I work for Penguin Random House, the one I'm doing for guy Gabriel case through Penguin Random House, and they want a producer on the line. So I'll have a director, listen to me, and he'll be making he or she'll be making notes. And I won't need to drop a marker or anything. So I basically just record, send it off to them, which is the way they work in their studios when I got into a woodland hills in Los Angeles. A couple? Well, not for a while I did a George RR Martin a couple of years ago. And that was the last time I was in the studio.

Toby Ricketts

It does feel like a wonderful treat. When you go into any you literally just reading experience,

Simon Vance

I have to say I'm I, I get very nervous. For this book, I know the first few chapters is going to be a little difficult because I'm aware somebody is listening. And one of the joys when I'm working alone, it's nobody's listening. Yeah, but being a studio is a different is a whole different atmosphere when you're in the studio, and you can just, yeah, you know that somebody's taking care of it. They're taking care of the levels, and they'll listen for everything. I don't know that I don't do a better job sometimes when I'm home on my own. Yeah, cuz I'm very, very judgmental. Yeah. And I will retake more. Because I hear it in my, if I'm letting somebody else take care of it. They're not always stopping me when I think you know, because I'm not thinking in that way. I'm just reading, you know, in the story, telling the story and so on. But I'm not thinking in a sort of directorial way. I know, there are people who don't like that sort of, they're having to think of three different things. But I'm actually quite capable of three things when I'm doing narration, and exactly

Toby Ricketts

the same. Yeah, exactly. And live sessions. I'm happy to run the recording and all the other stuff as well. It's kind of exhilarating. And if anyway, I'm very weary of time, because we've we've been talking for 65 minutes, it's been so wonderful. But I've been carried away. So I've got a few more questions, if you've got a few more minutes to to indulge me. Absolutely, yes, we barely started. Yeah. So this is more around the the business of audiobooks, because like not many people really get to get an insight into it until they actually become an audiobook narrator. And, like, how does the business of audiobooks work? Obviously, you've got relationships with publishers, which are probably your most important asset, and then you've got independent authors and people approaching you directly and whether they're whether you do like, you know, you record it for free, and then share the royalties. There's all kinds of options out there these days. So I'm gonna take us through some of those options.

Simon Vance

I can try I again, one of the reasons I don't do a lot of coaching and stuff is because I don't have I don't have the tools that are needed to begin, you know, I rely I could rely just on the publishers. They have come to me over the years with Blackstone audio for many years, and then I did go into New York, on for an APA, audio Publishers Association event. They run a conference every year, and you'd get a chance to meet publishers and so on and so forth. I met someone a couple of years later tanto asked me to do stuff in books on tape, we became Random House and then Penguin Random as so and then somebody else in the industry will call me from another publishers and so on. So I could just work for publishers, which is of course, if you're starting in the business, that's nearly impossible. You've got to get something out there. The one thing that again, this is what I don't really know the full details, but I have worked through a CX a couple of times. But I know some people go through a CX, because it's gonna be a bit dodgy. There are a lot of pitfalls. I would recommend going onto Facebook and joining some of their groups. I hate to recommend Facebook

Toby Ricketts

is a meeting place, isn't it? And like you say, like me, especially with COVID like the conferences just weren't happening or aren't happening. And it this it still happened the audio book conferences or Yeah, I

Simon Vance

believe it's happening soon. I'm not attending this year, but I think it's online. Right. But I but a CX, you audition you've got a you do everything yourself at home, and you can do royalty share, and but there are a lot of scams out there, you got to keep an eye on so I would highly recommend researching and maybe even just spending some time with an experienced narrator. Not me. But somebody who teaches or somebody who coaches who can can i Oh, you can you can learn by looking on Facebook, there is a great website called the narrator's roadmap and caring things. I think I can sorry, my

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, I think you have mentioned on your website there abouts. You've got a section for for sort of people who want to find out more

Simon Vance

when right isn't? Yeah, I mean, the website is something I got redone last year. I haven't touched it in a year, but it still got some information on that. Yeah, the writers roadmap that is narrated roadmap for search. I think they have a free level, I think she started charging to get into the real weeds of the thing. But I think there's a lot of good contacts you can get from that. And it gives you a lot of information and things to watch out for, it's really important to pay attention. Because there are people who put stuff out on on a CX recording, there are some horror stories of people recording a whole book and then finding the person who asked them to do it didn't have the rights. Law and given away, you know, because especially, you know, I would do a 15 hour book in a week or week and a half. And people are beginning might spend a month doing a book like that, and then find that they're not going to get any money for it because the book will never be allowed out. Yes, there will be things to watch out for in the business. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

yeah, absolutely. And you describe it on your site, as you know, the least well paid job in voiceover, which in my experience is kind of the case in terms of word count. Anyway, it's not like you get exactly $10,000 for 10,000 words. So it's, it's kind of a labor of love. Like I mean, the conditions are a lot better in a way in terms of if you love reading books, then you you know, you get something from it aside from the money which I think is quite nice a lot like I mean, I do I'm starting to do a lot of documentary work. And I'm loving it because I'm learning so much from doing the documentaries it's really enriching my life in that sense as well as you know, doing the work and getting paid for it. So is it the same with audiobooks do? Do you find you you are very learned from all of these titles? Very much.

Simon Vance

So. It is exactly that reason I fell into it because I just love doing it. And I didn't mind I didn't say eight years for charity one afternoon a week I get my time up because I loved reading the books. always enjoyed reading. It's it's not well paid. And you know, elearning is so much better paid because you aren't paid by the word in elearning. So many other areas of voiceovers do a commercial you can get 1000s and stuff but but audiobooks is it's it's a marathon, it's not a sprint, it's the joy of doing it. A lot of people I wonder about the people coming into the industry and expecting to make a living. And it takes a long time to get to that point. I mean, we're fortunate the union in the States has come in very strong in the last decade, I I'm proud to say I helped somewhat in that because we're industry as part of some of the publishers who came in some people came in around the time of audible being bought by Amazon. And because they could sell stuff to Amazon and they were paying some ridiculously low rates like $50 for an hour finished out. And that's just not livable, you can't live off that given many hours of research, you might have to put at least a minimum wage, or you're ending up being paid less than minimum wage. Yeah. So the union has come in and done a very good job of minimal minimal level of pay. And the publishers have been very good in that respect. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

fantastic. So coming towards the end, I ended up bring up a question a slightly different question than the one I crossed out, which is what do you think your best work is not necessarily your favorite but if people were to jump in to your sort of career, what would what's your best foot forward?

Simon Vance

Well, I didn't love the dickens always let the Dickens and great expectations you mentioned that one was I mean, in some ways, it's easy. For me to go to the ones that won awards, because that's had confirmation from elsewhere. Yeah, that I do, like I did. With Nicholas Nickleby was, was lovely. Because one of the early days, oh God, who was the author lives in Greensboro, North Carolina. Anyway, he did a blog about how he was quite a well known. He's a he's a well known author, and he did a blog about how he never understood his book when he's given it at school. And then he listened to my audiobook and it made all's make complete sense. And that's something that audiobook narrators do. Because people don't read a lot. There are people who do have difficulty reading. And the thing is, if you're reading something like if you're American reading Dickens or trollop, it's written in an English way that the language the structure of the sentences are hard to pull off the page for some people. Whereas a Narita actually brings it to life in a way that you understand more easily. So things like the dickens a wonder that sort of was the big one for me early on was The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. That's always been very well respected. And a lot of people will say about that reading it, they couldn't, they couldn't get into it at the beginning, because there's a long stretch at the beginning of the book. But listening to me, give it character really helped them into it. And that got me a huge number of fans. I loved Alan Moore's Jerusalem. I did. Alan Moore is the author of many graphic novels, V for Vendetta. And several others I have in my bookcase. But in watchmen and things like that, he's he's eccentric. He wrote this magnum opus, it's seven, it's 70 hours long. Wow. And when he wrote it, I got the call somebody, I think, who was a good idea. I recorded books. And I called Neil Gaiman. Because to call him I emailed him, because I know he knew our more well. And I said, Hey, I'm doing this when he said, What do you want me to introduce you to add in more so and I actually flew to England. I can't I got in touch with him. There's a whole long story there. But he's a bit eccentric, doesn't have a regular phone or anything. He's sort of off the grid. But I had a little bit of time before I started the book. And I recognize what this book meant to him. It was based in his hometown of Northampton. And I, I flew out on a Monday, I met him on the Wednesday, flew back on the first day was in the studio on the way to, you know, off my own bad, I pay for that myself, publish it and pay for it. And I love that book. 70 hours long, every chapter is sort of written in the style of a different author. But all the stories based on the history of Northampton is in Northampton. I'm saying that right. Yes. I slip up if I go wrong, and I apologize. But that's a lovely one.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Yeah. 70 hours is, it's a that's a very long time to you know, to keep it fresh and keep people's attention. Is that the longest audiobook you would have done?

Simon Vance

Oh, ah, yeah, it's close to it. I did. Oh, dance music a time Anthony Paul did a series of books back in the well, he started writing them quite early on, he finished in the 70s. He wrote 12 novels separated into quartets now, but it's all as Paul called Dance the music of time. And it's basically follows the group of people, one particular person and his group through the pre war pre first world war through to the 70s. And it seems ordinary historical document to look at English society, a certain sort of level of it. That I think is 86 hours. And of course, they've complete Sherlock Holmes. I did all that in one go. And that's 60 or 70 hours. So these ones yeah, those are the ones I've done in blocks. I mean, there's then there's a series like this one, I'm finishing 27 hours, which is the fifth one. And each of the other books has been like 15 or 18 or 20 hours. So it gets out there eventually, but I'd had that separated, you know, so that's separate. Yeah, but yeah, some big ones. I would reckon. I mean, the Guy Gavriel Kay books are a joy and T Garner is a fantastic one of his early ones. There's so many and Christopher Priest book I mentioned earlier, I love doing that and how fell occurred to me and the books that I Yeah. Oh, that one? dimension that one. It's very hard. I mean, it depends what people want to listen to what kind of books they want to listen to. It's very hard to recommend anything in particular, but the ones I've enjoyed have been those Jerusalem dance the music of time. Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.

Toby Ricketts

Fantastic, and well. We've taken up a lot of your time with this interview. So thank you so much for your time. Just before we go, there's lots of guitars on the wall behind you. And do you play the guitar as well?

Simon Vance

Yeah, yes. Well, I, I've had a guitar since I was a kid. I've sort of come back to in the last decade, I suppose. I've played I had a couple one. There's one there that I got in. That's less for coffee from Antalya, which is one of the Japanese makes, but it's the oldest one I've got. But I had that one for years. And I had a band when I was a student. I played a lot. And then I just sort of I've been messing around ever since. And then a few years ago, I promised myself I wanted a Les Paul, because that was when I grew up in the 60s watching everybody, Jimmy Page, Eric Clapton. They're all playing les Paul's, I wanted one so and I thought, well, I got in some late 50s. And I thought, Well, when I can really play well, and I will deserve a Les Paul, I'll go get one. And I hit 16 went Screw this. play that well. So I bought one. And that's, that's on the wall in the corner over there. Yeah. And when I got the Les Paul and I started doing online lessons, I liked the Telecaster. And then oh, my wife and kids got me the HSS Stratocaster PRs as a 10 top, that's the blue one, a really nice, beautiful piece. And I've got this was a latest joy. It's the Gibson 1959 reissue. He has 335 pounds beautiful, which is gorgeous. And I'm doing online lessons where the guy was online because we don't meet up but he's in LA. And I'm finding, it's great. It's a wonderful challenge, but I'm really finding the basic stuff. I forgot how did how does my finger do that? So it's embarrassing. So I'm embarrassed by how I'm one of those guys. There's a name for me, I can't know what it is for the kind of people who have more money than guitar talent. And I'm actually getting better and better and I got a I've got a drum machines and things. I got a drum kit around the corner as a bass. I've got up on the house too. So I think I can play I'm always self deprecating that I can play someone I love. I love that. And also, you know, I'm getting older. And one of the things they say about keeping the brain alive is challenging yourself. Exactly. Yeah. You know, same old, same old, same old. I mean, the books, I did all the books, but I'm sort of aging them out a little bit not doing as many hours a day as I used to. So don't have time for things like this.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Fantastic. Thank you so much for your time. Is there anything else you wanted to cover that we haven't done the interview?

Simon Vance

I'll discuss Ukraine

Toby Ricketts

can spend a very long time talking and we should do in the second episode.

Simon Vance

Say hi to your mom will do. Absolutely.

Toby Ricketts

Absolutely. Well, it's been an absolute pleasure to talk to you today. Thank you for sharing some of your wisdom and the stories from behind the scenes of audiobook wealth. It's been a pleasure.

Simon Vance

Thanks, Toby. It was a joy

An interview with British voiceover legend - Peter Dickson

Peter Dickson is a legend of the British Voiceover scene.
His voice is instantly recognisable to most, and he even has the moniker of "Voiceover man". This Christmas, I sat down with Peter to enjoy a couple of glasses of fine whisky, and also for a wide ranging discussion about the ins and outs of Peter's career, including his impressions and thoughts on various voiceover topics including;
Why living in the country is good for recording
Is it still important to go into studios to do VO? Or work remotely?
Why it’s best to keep your studio setup simple
Is microphone choice important?
Why a more expensive microphone won’t make you sound better.
Is microphone placement important?
Why is consistency important? And how to achieve consistency across recordings
Strange sounds in the studio…
What is a typical day like for Peter Dickson?
Getting jobs in the US vs the UK
Why is it good having an agent?
How voiceover work is stratified in different levels
How hunting for clients turns into farming your clients as your career progresses
How Peter is interested in aviation
What are some of the highlights from your career in TV?
Your voice is very recognized in the UK, what’s that like?
What is the range of your voiceover work?
How there are different genres of voice over work appearing
That X Factor voiceover, and how it came about
Why committing to the performance is so important
What are some of the highlights from Peter’s career - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZaBt_bXlXmk
Is it important to set goals?
How did gravy for the brain come about?
Recap of the most important things we’ve learned about voiceover this year
What are some of the trends in VO for 2022?

What is Christmas like in the Dickson household?

Here is a transcript of our conversation:

Toby Ricketts

Welcome to vo life with gravy for the brainy Oceania My name is Toby Ricketts. I talk to the VO superstars in the world today the movers and shakers, people who are making things happen and who people are talking about. And it's my great privilege coming up to Christmas to share a lovely glass of whiskey with one of the most notable voice actors in the world. Definitely the UK, I think he was voted as like the most recognizable voice spent in a national poll recently. But he's also been the voice of The X Factor, and so many other things, the Olympics, a billion different documentaries and different things. So it's my great pleasure to welcome my friend and colleague, Peter Dixon.

Peter Dickson

Well, thank you very much indeed for that lovely intro. And I see you're opening your whiskey and I've got my whiskey here. I've actually pre poured mine in good TV fashion, so I'll probably top it up as we go along. But anyway, why don't you pull your I know we will get me through most of it.

Toby Ricketts

Exactly. I had a bottle. Don't worry.

Peter Dickson

You're well ahead of a sec. Good. Cheers.

Toby Ricketts

Merry Christmas. Yeah. Mm hmm. I'm on the Glenmorangie. Neck that I'm on

Peter Dickson

the I'm on the Macallan, which is a bit harsh, but it's a special occasion.

Toby Ricketts

Exactly. Yes. It'll be nice when we can share a glass in person next time you're on the same side of the planet.

Peter Dickson

I know. Isn't it remarkable though, that you know you're in Australia and I'm in London well as near as dammit. But we are you know what the other side of that we're opposite sides of this planet. Yeah, to each other. And yet, we're speaking in sort of, almost 4k video. And we are was no delay. I mean, to my father, who was you know, he, you know, funny, when he was alive, this would have been he died about 20 years ago, this would have been amazing to him, he wouldn't even believe this was possible. And yet, here we are taking this for granted now. Not only just to do this kind of thing, but also in the way we work, which we'll get onto I'm sure in some at some point in very near future. But this to me, this is amazing. And and we take it for granted. But it is an extraordinary thing that satellites and you know, high tech, fiber optics and all these things can make this sort of thing possible it is and revolutionize the way we work

Toby Ricketts

it has exactly and I feel like because I remember finding out that, you know, the first video phone call was actually invented in like the 1950s. And that everyone's kind of it's one of those technologies that's been in the wings, it's been possible for a very long time, but difficult, and even up to sort of like 2010, sort of 2011 we still weren't really using it on a daily basis, like we do now. Like I use Zoom absolutely every single day. And it's only really in the last sort of four to five years. And now with the pandemic, just you know, it's driven home that we use it constantly in that video calling is basically the standard, you know,

Peter Dickson

yeah. Yeah, it's a no Jimmy I've got, I talked to a colleague here in the UK, who has converted his studio into a almost a TV studio. He's a he's a, he's an audio artist. But what he's done is quite clever. He's, he's created a studio with a video, I haven't done it in mind. But he's got a a wide angle lens on his camera. And behind him, he's got a an LED screen on which he can put the client's name or logo. So when he's working for someone, he has the client's logo behind him, which they love, because everybody loves their name or their logo to be displayed. And so that really, that that initiative has given him that kind of leverage, which most of us wouldn't even think of doing and and they his clients absolutely adore him for it. So he does all of his sessions remotely, but they are done. Not just audio but video as well. So they can see him doing it. Yeah, now I do some of my sessions like that, but not all of them. But he leads the way in this he's really created a fantastic studio where it looks like this, like a TV set

Toby Ricketts

exactly what I'm going to steal that idea somewhat because like I've kind of set mine up a bit like it like I've got lights that I can change the colors and everything on like and I've got a professional cinema grade camera as the as the webcam for this. But in the new studio I was planning on having and focusing more on the background because like it's so interesting with Zoom calls and when you do connect with clients these days about who chooses to blur out their background, and who chooses to kind of emphasize the thing that you know, that they want to emphasize, and things like that. It's funny how they actually make a difference. Like I noticed, you know, our colleague JMC always has his we joke that you know, his voice Arts Awards that are lined up along the Seeliger holding up The roof, because I've got so many of them. And it just I feel like it's one of those subliminal things that when you do connect with clients, they go, Well, this guy knows what he's doing. You know? Like, it's, it's another factor. Whereas if you blur out the background, it's kind of like, are they working out of their spare cupboard? Like what's going on there? You know. So it's I feel like the Zune background thing is a whole new paradigm of kind of marketing. That hasn't really been explored yet. So yeah, some space behind you there. What are you gonna do with I've got,

Peter Dickson

but I could do something here. I suppose I could have a screen there or something. Yeah.

Toby Ricketts

Getting this logo on a curtain. So I could, you know, have it back and forth.

Peter Dickson

Yeah. But I think the the old sort of green screen thing is sort of over done. Now. People know, you know, if you're trying to pretend you're in or you're out your windows, the Pacific Ocean. It's not gonna work. But I think I think you're right. So make it real, but make it relevant to them. And this is this guy. I know he's done this. This screen, he puts his clients logos up on nearly on the LED screen. It's a fantastic way of, of really cementing your relationships. Absolutely.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. That's fantastic. So you were saying that you, you do some sessions remotely, because you use sort of your living outside of London? You're sort of an hour or so from the train, I think, from London. And yeah, yeah.

Peter Dickson

I'm about 35 minutes from the West End of London. So I happen to skip basically, where I live is in the middle of where I live is in the countryside. So I am literally I've no name, I can't see anybody near me. I'm, I've known known that my nearest neighbor is probably a half a mile away from me. So it's the best of both worlds, but best of both worlds for me. So I love being here. And and, of course, being in this sort of remote rural location means that there's no real problem with noise Ingress. Here, though, I have a very well, insulated studio, but I don't have to worry about anything I worry about the occasional tractor goes by, or maybe an aircraft or a helicopter or something, but it's very short lived. So I don't have these because as many people will have, as, you know, the constant rumble of traffic perhaps, or trains going by every 10 minutes. I don't have any of that. So I'm very lucky.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, it is. It is one of those considerations. I mean, I really enjoy living out in the country for the same sort of reasons that there's very little reason that there is noise apart from the current studio, there's there's rain noise on the roof, which is why I'm building the new studio that we were discussing. And the casual logging truck that goes past down the country road that I live on. And planes, of course, as you say, but but living in the country definitely has its benefits for voiceover I think especially now things are mostly remote, you know, and how much of your work do you do remotely?

Peter Dickson

I would say more and more of it now, I think probably, but the majority of the bigger commercials that I do that the higher paying ones, the big agency jobs, they still want to see you in town. And so I go in to London for those. I'm happy to do so because they pay me well. But but all the other stuff, as you would imagine all the kind of jobs that I do for corporate and smaller commercial work for regional stations. I do from here, all of it. And so this rather nice, rather nice lifestyle balance where I go to London, maybe about twice a week, perhaps and the rest of the time I'm here which which suits me fine. I love I love the I wouldn't want to be in town all day long every day would be be too much. I think I've got a perfectly balanced now.

Toby Ricketts

Absolutely fantastic. And did that change. I noticed when I when I had a British agent. They said you know, everyone loves your voice. But the fact that you can't appear in person is a big like it's it doesn't do well for you, you know, you really need to be here. Clients really want to press the flesh, they want to meet the voiceover artist and stuff. And I found that kind of surprising because in the American market, it's almost it's not exactly the opposite. But it's like you can you can do anything online now you can just source connect them to anywhere and it doesn't really matter even for the really big commercials that don't need to actually see you in the studio. Did it's a different city in the UK.

Peter Dickson

No, I think I think the past year has changed the perceptions immeasurably and irreversibly as well. I think, you know, we have had a scramble for everyone to have a home studio in the UK in the USA. Yes, most of most established voice talent had their own studio facilities. Not all but a lot of them did in the UK. A lot did but a lot didn't. And when the pandemic struck, they were no longer able to go into studios in town. So there was a scramble to build home studio facilities. And so they did that and I think that's now become much more acceptable to play Who are the younger producers I work with, for instance, in back three years ago would not be prepared to work with me in my home studio. And most of the studios who I was working with, for obvious reasons, because, you know, they they have their own, you know, their own businesses to, to, to kind of worry about and to maintain. They were very unhappy they would not to sort of countenance clients working with me remotely because there's a it was used to find fault with my audio, whatever it was, for whatever reason, of course, there was no fault. But because they were trying to justify their existence. It's interesting there because most clients now I work with most agencies, I work with a quite happy to work for me remotely. More and more so and I think that's a great thing. Because it widens there also widens their talent pool, because so you could be you in where you are New Zealand are on an equal playing field now with me? No. So they can they can, they can access you as well as they can meet as easily as they can be. So that's, in many ways. It's, it's leveled the playing field for all of us. And I don't think that's a bad thing. I think it's quite a good thing, particularly for the product, the end product of the client love it.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, absolutely. That's fantastic. And so with your home studio, I mean, obviously, you know, you mentioned they do need to conform to a technical spec, there's still a base level at which it needs to operate on Are you a kind of a studio nerd Do you like to get get you know, deep into the technical stuff? Or are you more of a technophobe, or do you sit somewhere in the middle.

Peter Dickson

Now, I like to keep things as simple as possible, Toby, I think, my rig my setup is here is very simple, I've got a actually just bought a MacBook Air, which is, you know, I love Mac's they work and so and and because I work in mainly in audio. The DM one processor in the MacBook Air is perfectly capable of looking after the standard audio session without too much demand. And I have a you know, I've a focus right to itu here and, and I've got a couple of mics I've got a range of microphones around me I can use for various things. So the reason I did that was because I've got a place in America as well. So I go I did go traveling a bit and I wanted to be able to create the same sound and have the same technical lack of complexity if you like wherever I am. So I just have a very simple setup. It's digital and digital out and my booth is the sound that creates when I'm in here but like when I go to my home in America I just take the same kit with me protect my 414 which 416 shotgun mic which is great mic to travel with because it's so light and it's very robust. You've got my MacBook Air my to ITU and that's all you need really is I can I can create the same audio quality as I do in the studio here as anywhere in the world. Yeah, so I'm a big fan of keeping it simple.

Toby Ricketts

Totally Yeah. And I had that revelation probably about four years ago when I was doing quite a lot of traveling as well. And I had a young like one of the the kind of like one of the best microphones in the world and women use 67 which is like the valve version of the 87 which is my primary mic but it had this huge power supply you had to carry travel easily doesn't travel easy and you need power is the other thing whereas you know if you have a phantom powered mic like before one six not only is it super directional so you can record in pretty much any space you know you can make it work but it's can be you know, bus powered off your off the interface which is powered from the laptop so you don't know You know, I've recorded stuff in the back in the backs of cars and car parks before no mains power required. Exactly great battery only. So it's so that's definitely a trick for and people often do get caught up in the sort of the tech stuff and go down tech rabbit holes of what makes should I buy and it really it doesn't matter as much as it used to because everything is fairly capable nowadays, especially if you go with something that's really tried and tested like a 416 and the scarlet two twos there. It's a great combo.

Peter Dickson

Look, I mean, people the first question, most newbies asked me, What mic do I have? I said, Well, I happen to have a 416 and I've got a m for Sennheiser and I've got I've got various other things in the cupboard I can use but it's not the point. I mean, you know, if you're spending I think I sort of sort of set the bar at about 200 pounds about $300, you know, upwards doesn't matter. I really Yeah, nobody's going to be able to tell the difference unless you're really good. You can spend you know, 2018 102,000 pounds or $2,200 on a UAC seven perhaps but, you know, if you're, if your vocal technique or your microphone technique is not great or your studio doesn't say Write one of these very high, high fidelity microphones like a UID. Seven isn't going to make you sound any better, in fact, is going to magnify any of the issues you have with your with your space or with your technique. So, you know, oftentimes it's better not to have that sort of level of quality in the microphone, but to have something that's just does the job well enough? Yeah, exactly. You don't have to,

Toby Ricketts

you don't have to spend. I found that exactly. Because I recently purchased a UHD. Seven. And I was very, like, I'm very happy with the sound of my booth with the four and six. And I thought, you know, this, this will be like the next level up, and it was kind of a reward to myself too, because I've always wanted one as the iconic, you know, microphone, it's like that you just see someone with that. And you're like, you know what you're doing. But I found that when I set it up, and I spoken to it, it did exactly what you said, it magnifies the flaws in my room, because it's a cardioid and not a shotgun. So it was picking up different ambiences that I didn't set this room up for. So I've put it away for when I build the new studio, and I'm going to tune the studio around that new microphone. But it was a shock, it was kind of a shock. It was I still was formed to that newbie principle of if I buy an expensive microphone, I'll sound better, which is it's not it doesn't work like that it's capable of producing a better quality sound, if everything else is at the same level. But if it doesn't, it just shows all of the flaws out which was a real, you know, it was good to relearn that lesson for me.

Peter Dickson

Well, I'm glad you learned the lesson, Toby because so many of us don't. And we all love we all want to have a you 87 I've never had one never had the need to have one. But you know, I know many of my friends and colleagues do have them and they love them. But he's like having a Rolls Royce. You know, it's the badge and and if you can afford it, yes, I would highly recommend them. And I work with them a lot in London studios where I where I work a lot, but I I love my shotgun. And not normally people do live in because they're very directional. And depends what you're doing. So if I'm doing, say, long form narration or audiobooks, which I don't do very much, but doing so let's say a corporate long form. I will switch into the end for which I've got just up here on another stand. I can pull that down. You see I can do this. Yeah. Or I can use my you can't see it, but I could probably pull it down. You can see my mic there. So I've got a range of things randomly so I can it's horses for courses really but this is this I do mostly commercials and promo so this 416 works very well for me because and a lot of light Entertainment Television. So big TV shows I'll do on that my because it's crisp, it's spot on. It cuts through. It's got a nice, dynamic. And whenever I process it, I do a lot of my own sort of EQ and compressing that microphone. Bar any I've used is perfect for what I do.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, absolutely. I couldn't agree more. Actually, I've I bought my full review six have you got there in front of you. It's 416. It's a vintage four and six. I bought it actually on Ebay. I bought it as an experiment because I was using nomen K mid fours, which are like little pencil. Yeah, but they're still cardioid. But they were very detailed and very pop sensitive. Like I had to have three or four pop filters between me and the mic because they were so sensitive. And they didn't travel well. And they were costing a lot to maintain because they had some components that were sort of getting, you know, they were vintage mics as well. And so I thought everyone's looking at the four and six, I'm just going to get one secondhand and see if I like it. And it's arrived. And I've been using it for that length of time. And every time I switch to something else. I just want to go back to it because it's so dependable that the self noise is so low for traveling. Like I've chucked it into suitcases. It's gone. It's done. Yeah, 10s of 1000s of kilometers with me. And it's it performs like a brand new and even though it's about 30 years old. It's just It astounds me How could these mics?

Peter Dickson

Now let's talk about mic position. Toby so you I'm, I'm probably working with my mic right now where I would normally work down above me toward pointing downwards. Your your mic is pointing upwards. So yes, which is best.

Toby Ricketts

And I know I when I first chatted to Hugh a few years ago, and he saw my thoughtful one six pointing up from my from my desk into my mouth. He was like that's a bit interesting. Like everyone does it top down. And I feel like it works, it can work better coming from the bottom because like it then it kind of gets a little bit of the warmness of chest as well, you know, like it was traditionally used of up above because on movie sets, you know, that was the only place off camera that you could have it. And then But then of course you get proximity effect, the base rolls off and you get you get sort of a cut through sort of thin effect. But if you're doing a nice warm narration, then these mics can get quite warm. You just have to go and get close to them and then watch the Pops and you might technique to make sure that it doesn't. This does pop up a lot and I've got two pop filters on there at the moment and I vary the distance depending on

Peter Dickson

the they do they do pop, I mean, I use mine, I'm just you, I've got a higher above me than I would normally have, because we're on vision vision, but I would normally use mine about here. And so you can get quite close to it and get cozy. But I've got this metal filter in front of it. And the reason I have it above me is because I work I very rarely use paper, I've got a screen a very large screen here in front of me. And my where I'm where I'm looking now is where I have my recording window. So I will sit and probably have that down about here. And I will read off this screen and have one eye on them on the levels and everything and then go back to editing. But I didn't have it there is because I like having it out of the way. And I don't think I don't have to think about the microphone, I don't worry about popping it because I never going to pop it here. Because I'm not in front of it.

Toby Ricketts

I mean, I I started doing it from underneath because I my screen is directly in front of me like I'm talking directly to my screen now. It's one of those big GM wide curved ones from from Samsung. So it's like it sort of fills your whole field of view. And I was worried about reflections from the screen. And like if you get to a screen it reflects back. And the best way for these mics is like they reject 100% of what comes at them from the rear. So my idea was to have it so that the mic was coming straight up from the screen so that it wasn't picking up any of that reflection. But then that's right where I'm trying to read so I'd moved it down so that I could still I could still gesticulate and still have a clear field of view. Basically that was kind of my your script.

Peter Dickson

Do you still work off paper? Do

Toby Ricketts

No, no, no, it's all completely digital. I have a printer, which doesn't even work. I think I haven't printed something for a very long time. So

Peter Dickson

where is your script? When you're really good on the screen in front of you? Yeah, exactly. Yeah. Right, you split the screen between your script and your and your recording window.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, well, actually, to get super geeky on I've got the I've got the Asus Zenbook laptop, which has got two screens in it, it's got one on the keyboard, and then one up, and then I've got this external screen up there. So instead of having a screen which goes left to right, I've got a screen that goes up to down. So I look down on the desktop and I can see my zoom window or anything live stuff in the main laptop window sort of down here, I've got the recording windows, making sure everything and then the script is directly in front of me. So I'm predicting straightforward, and then the camera up there. So I've got this kind of like look up look down system, instead of which is great for like your mic technique. Because if you're turning your head around there, you can hear that you lose the crispness of your voice, etc. So it's better to dance down than it is.

Peter Dickson

So always want to keep, you always want to keep your head at the same distance from the mic and the same position Exactly. Throughout the whole process. And so I always think it's very important. An old engineer in London always taught me long ago, Mike positioning is one of the keys to getting this right. So you once you've established your mic position, I put I'm very foot I'm anal about I'm fussy, so I will spend ages. So it getting it in the right place where I feel it's not obstructing my field of view. And I'm feeling on the right distance from it like a hand span away. And I'm not going to pop the mic, so I don't have to worry about that. I take my cans off, actually, I've got a pair of headphones here, which I used to, you know, set, set things up with, and I can hear it. And once I'm happy with that, I've put that I always put them away, and I never use them when I'm recording, I'll always sit here and I'll go, right, I'm confident that what I'm going to do next is going to give me a good result. And I'm happy with the position the scripts in the right position, I've got it on the screen, and I'm recording my audio here. Let's go. And then I ignore all that technical stuff. Because what I'm then focused on is the content of what I'm reading, rather than worrying about the technology or the the engineering side of things, which really you don't want to be thinking at all about when you're performing. Because once you start thinking about whether whether it's right level or pop, am I popping, you know, you start to your your thoughts are with other things rather than the subject matter at hand. So that's the only reason I do that. Yeah, I think

Toby Ricketts

I was gonna say like one of my advices to people who are starting out and building this sort of first studio is try and find a permanent place you can set it up, don't be setting it up every time you need to do an audition because it will you'll have no consistency in your sound. If you do that. You know, it's good to find a cupboard or a wardrobe or somewhere where you can leave it set up so that you do have that consistency. And recently I've been doing this this project for the History Channel voicing a 10 part documentary series. And one of the things I've been struggling not struggling with but one of the things that I've been very conscious of is the need for consistency. And the fact that even if you move something in your studio or you're just sitting in a slightly different place, you'll listen to the two audios from separate episodes or pickups and they won't quite fit together. Yeah, and that's aside from just the normal voice like your voice chimes day to day basis. Yeah 100 days a big thing. So that's what you know, you've done a great number of documentaries, have you sort of rationalized the the consistency and you get back into that same character that you're playing in another episode?

Peter Dickson

It's very, very good, very interesting question. Most of the documentaries I've done have been, I do a whole episode in one studio, and I've never done a documentary in my studio. I've always gone into town to do it. So I've done it in London. And so I leave it with the engineer to try and match the sound. But of course, episode two episode is not so important. But more importantly, you know, when you're when you're in audio books, that's I read my I wrote my own book and read my own my own biography. And that was the first very first time I'd ever done a long form, piece like that. And that was one of the most challenging things I think I ever did, from a point of view of a voiceover and also from the point of view of engineering it because you're right, you come in, you do a day, and and then you come in the next day, and you think, well, I've got to listen back to what I did before and try and recreate the same sound because the listener is going to be maybe going from chapter one to chapter two within the space of 10 seconds, whereas I've had a 24 hour gap. And so I have to kind of be aware of that. And and it's not always easy to do, but you have to, once you've started your mic position, I marked it, I took a photograph of the studio, that this is where my mic is this through my chair is I need to keep that constant all the way through the recording. And because the studio, the walls don't change, that's, that's okay. But I knew I had to make sure the mic was in the same position. I was in the same position. And my script was in the same position and everything sounded the same. And the levels of course, I had to make sure were the same. So it was. So that was a challenge because you're always thinking about the engineering and the the sound and not really initially focused on the words. So once you've got all that sort of sorted out, you had to sort of say, well, let's forget all that. That's when I know that's sorted. Let me focus on the script.

Toby Ricketts

Absolutely. One of the things that I noticed I had this weird resonance in my studio for one day, and I said, where's that noise coming from? Well, I found this but tell me what yours was my was this water bottle being empty. And because it rings he had it that's got a kind of a yes. And just because it was down here and it was empty, it put like a boost in the certain frequency. And it was, you know

Peter Dickson

what mine was? What was mine was and I couldn't work out what it was sounded like it was an odd frequency ringing it was sort of like a, like an echo or some sort of resonance somewhere. I thought it's not in here because this is pretty dead this room. And I suddenly worked out what it was, and it was my old pop filter was made from it was a it was a nylon in a ring rather like this one. Yeah, this is a metal one. So it doesn't resonate. I suddenly worked out that my my voice was hitting this pop filter, and it was going boom, it was a booming a boom I get like a drum head almost like a drum at the end of every sentence. It was what is that? What does that entail on the on this shouldn't be there. And it worked out it was this this old pop filter I had and of course I got rid of it immediately. And I bought this metal one, which is very closely

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, the Stedman screens are available now but they adapt they're very superior.

Peter Dickson

So there's no kind of interference so this old nylon thing was resonating with my breath voice and hitting the mic and creating this odd kind of booming sound at the end of every sentence. You're right about screens in front of you though, you know I was worried about I've got a big screen here big screen here. But this 416 rejects everything from the back and so

Toby Ricketts

this so direction was just amazing how directional they are which is which is great for for spaces that aren't at optimum kind of treatment. Yeah definitely find at the moment I've got a resonant problem with I'm storing a drum kit in this mezzanine floor above and every time I make it I do a really buried with big projection I hear it just going this is the drum hits pick up that sound it's funny but you get sensitive to when you when you pick it up like that. So what does a normal day look for you look like for you at the moment like I mean when I'm tempted to do these pie charts of like when you're a beginner voiceover all your time is going to be looking for work and you know, occasionally doing work and then and then doing editing in your work but when you reach sort of like our level and you're working full time as a voiceover artist, and you're a few years down that track it's less time looking for work and just time doing work you know, so what what is your kind of like percentage that I do still have to look for work or does it all to arrive, neatly packaged in brown paper on your door?

Peter Dickson

No, I, you're right, though the early days, it's a question of establishing yourself and and I'm at a position now where I have an agent, and a fan of several agents when agent in the UK and two in the US. So they bring me stuff. And also, to my day starts like because I come in here and I sit down and I open up my emails and there's usually a bunch of auditions that are required from my US agent. The UK is operates completely differently. The UK agent never ever asked me to audition. So in the UK you don't it's just unreal. Just this is great. Yeah, it's all on demo reels. Yeah. And I'm, I'm, in a way I love I like that. Because, you know, in some ways, I do quite like auditioning, though, because it gives me the chance to experiment and do stuff. Yeah. And the thrill of the chase, and practice and the thrill of the chase. Yeah, and 90% of the time in those American auditions, I never get the gig. But that doesn't bother me so much. I think part I think I've kind of conditioned myself to believe and think that my job is to audition. And that's what the job is. And while you're auditioning, you're also practicing and getting better. So it gives me the opportunity to also, you know, see what's out there to see what people want and understand the client's demands and wishes, and what the current trends are. And so I value that very much Lee, but I wish that, you know, the US would book more off demo reels rather than auditions, when it comes

Toby Ricketts

on, because they used to do that a lot than they used to be more about they did now with with the advent of especially since COVID, it's you know, it's really ramped up in terms of having to audition for everything. And often now, I mean, they, you know, it's like a two page script, we need you to read the whole thing. So you got like, 200 Voiceover artists spending, you know, 15 minutes looking at the script, and you think, Geez, they're only gonna choose one person.

Peter Dickson

I know, just let us why did why did they do the two pages just do two lines, you can tell within five seconds, whether you're right or wrong,

Toby Ricketts

often, you know, the rub is these days is that the client will decide on the voiceover, they want to see the they want to see the entire thing basically produced, it's like walking to a restaurant and saying, I want to taste everything on your menu, you know, just so that I'm sure I'm going to get the right one. And so that's I mean, that's the rationale is that they want to cut it with picture and then show the client and get the client basically all the way across the line before they engage with the voice of Alice, which is kind of putting more, you know, honest back on the voiceover artists in a way. I mean, I do like auditioning, but sometimes it's kind of taking the test when, you know, you do have to record a long script. Yeah, and I'm not sure that time. But that doesn't seem to be reflected in the UK, like you're saying,

Peter Dickson

I do I do question that. Mostly, I say, would really you need me to read all of this? And, you know, wonder whether they? Well, I know they don't, but I just kind of have this slight, slight, slight feeling. They might use it without telling you. But I don't think I don't think that's going to help you do

Toby Ricketts

hear stories. Like I'd never do that on a p2p. But often there's there's a lot of trust is the trust game with an agent. And you know, you have to kind of just put it out there and hope because there's no chance of ever policing it and finding it yourself. It was used. So it says it is a tricky trust game that we often sort of play with with clients. But do you do self agent at all as well? Or do you make everything go through your your agent?

Peter Dickson

Go do some some SELF SELF SELF sort of administered work. But not much. I mean, I I mean, I often find that, well, it's quite difficult to price yourself particularly in in a more complex, complex scenario where they're saying, we want to use you in this territory in that territory. And I could sit down, I suppose, and use the grave of the brain that makes great guide. But time is of the essence and a lot of these things. And they say, Can you can you do this? And how much would it be? And I forgot, I've no idea. So I could work it out. But it would take me half an hour. And I just said, my agent will do all that and they do it really well. And my agent has been marvelous. And most of the time, they they would ask for more money than I would have the nerve to ask for even the ability to score. And so you know, even though I pay them a decent percentage is quite, it's quite good to have an agent because they can deal with the payment of the invoicing and also the recovery of the funds of the funds as well at the end. And so, you know, I'm happy to give it to them. But the smaller jobs are the sort of more basic kind of easier to price jobs. I'm happy to do that directly with clients and I do

Toby Ricketts

see a lot of you know, new talent coming through who may have set up a studio and got the sort of got the job. Thank you As soon as I get an agent, that's it, the work will just start pouring in. So it's probably worth saying that, like, it's not, it's, it's not always like that, that you have an agent, because I've got, I think I've got six agents in the US and New Zealand and I did have an agent in the UK, I'm looking for another one, if there's any agents watching, but like, you know, it's it's, I feel like you're you have to be right at the top of your game in order to just make a living off what your your agent gives you. But often people think that it's the ticket to doing time like that, once you get an agent, it's that you're away laughing. But I feel like that the the new way, especially in the in the US is is for the sort of self agency model or a hybrid next bit that you're doing with where you some work comes from your agent. And then you know, some possibly majority of the work comes from a mix of paper plays, direct marketing, all kinds of you know, there's, I remember doing, you know, webinars on this stuff, and there's this, when you really look into it, there are so many avenues that you can get voice work from, if you really investigate them. And an agent is just one of them, you know, and possibly a dwindling one. I mean, I think there's definitely still a place for agents in the world. But it's definitely not what it used to be. Because now people have their own studios and clients have lower budgets, there's a lot more work around. But I think the the average price of voiceover work has come down probably at the bottom that we that we thought

Peter Dickson

it was oh, no, but I think we're seeing more of a stratification of the market. But where were the top 25th is Asian workers, the top is the best voices, the ones who are the famous actors, the big names, they will always be in that top, top fifth. And then you get lower levels where you get the people who don't aren't big names, they're not the famous voices famous faces, that I'm still getting quite good quality work there, the next layer down and then you will have another layer of the sort of more basic staff and then there's more self administered work. And then there's the, you know, the pay to play sites. And then there's the fiber loss in the very bottom, you know, so there's, there's room for everybody. I'm not not kind of denigrating anyone in his layering. But it depends where you where you rise to. And, you know, you can, you can also work in all these different levels. I mean, I don't work on the very bottom, I don't do any, I don't promote myself on Fiverr, I don't even do pay to play now anymore. So not that I ever did anyway, but greatly, but I've been involved with a few of them. However, I, I don't anymore, because I don't have to I'm luckily thank God, I'm in a position where, you know, I've got enough client I know worked hard. And I've got a client base, that people come back to me and asked me to do stuff on a repeat annual basis. And, and I'm very happy to have that ongoing and that's the ideal position to get to where you know, if you start out on pay to play, and you start out doing five, or you build your, your client base, to a point where you come off those platforms, and you just work directly with those people. That's the aim.

Toby Ricketts

Absolutely, yeah, yes. Someone that's probably sort of transitioning into that into that kind of life, I've definitely found that like, as the years go on, just the level of repeat work comes up. And so you don't need to hunt as much about farming your clients, you know, it's like you turned from a hunter into a farmer. And that can lead to a more settled sort of life where you can pick and choose a bit more about the things that actually speak to you, that you want to do rather than things that you sort of have Yes, because you have to pay the bills or whatever. Yeah, so. So tell me about some of your other interests. It was fascinating doing the research on this because like there's there's a great number of sort of fan sites and things popping up about your career, etc. But you're also you've, you're into aviation a lot. Is that right? You've had a long history. Yes,

Peter Dickson

I guess I know that when I was at university, I joined the by accident, I think more than by design, the university Air Squadron, which is a program run by the Royal Air Force within the universities in the UK. And they have I think about six or seven sites in the UK where universe where universities are and they encourage people to join to Fly Light aircraft. With the view I've got I think it is completely selfish viewpoint from their point of view to encourage you to become a pilot in the in the Air Force, or join the Air Force in some capacity. So yes, I joined the University Air Squadron when when I was in the second year of university and spent three glorious years flying Scottish aviation Bulldog aerobatic aircraft, which was great fun. But I never flew privately after that I just flew through for years, but I've maintained my relationship with the Air Force and I still again in it because I was I didn't join the Air Force obviously I joined the BBC and became a journalist and a voiceover actor. So I but I'd like to maintain my relationship with them so I do help them a lot. I do a lot of award ceremonies for them free of charge. I do a lot of pro bono work with the

Toby Ricketts

Air Force and you can get typical kind of thing. So they give you the occasional plane ride to say thank you. They do they do.

Peter Dickson

I've had a few play, which is great and I don't demand it but I just think isn't they just occasionally said to me, do you want to come and fly in a fast jet? I say, Oh yeah, it'd be nice. I've done a few fun fast jet trips and a few transport aircraft. Yeah, it's been great fun. I love it.

Toby Ricketts

fast jets would be a different experience altogether because we saw aviation.

Peter Dickson

And I flew, I flew in a typhoon and a tornado or which are two of the tornadoes, sadly, has been retired from the Air Force by flew, flew in the last year of his life, which was brilliant. And the typhoon was the Eurofighter, that's a really a spectacular, aircraft very fast, did a performance takeoff in that that was, you know, talked about nought to 60 in two seconds, it was like being kicked in the back by a couple of donkeys. And we go up, we go up to we're within two seconds, you're at 10,000 feet, and then within and, you know, these push the throttles forward in your supersonic. But, you know, it's incredible. And what an aircraft and I have that had to have the privilege of flying in the back of one of those was amazing. I loved every second Ave, I love my association with the, with the Royal Air Force. So yeah, I still maintain my, my, my links.

Toby Ricketts

Brilliant. And you've also dabbled in a lot of TV work, which I wasn't as aware of in terms of like, you know, you've done writing for TV shows as well like with them, you know, TV credits, what are some of the sort of highlights from like, I guess, like, as a bigger question, maybe another question. How does onscreen work compare to being behind the mic and being the kind of invisible TV star, because they're quite different I imagined

Peter Dickson

they are. And I've always tried to be behind the scenes, I never really wanted to be a TV star and never watch TV star never, never really want to be. I've done a few I've done a bit of on camera work. And I do enjoy it, as we said, but I've never sought to be in front of the camera as a sort of ongoing mainstay of my business. We're voice actors, and that's where we like to stay behind the scenes and do our thing without being seen. That's one of the that's one of the perks for me is not being visually famous

Toby Ricketts

Nick market and having you know, well, yes, people know who you are, but they don't instantly recognize you like they would you know, Brad Pitt or

Peter Dickson

so my voice in the UK is is is very well now. I've been doing it for two years. So my on radio and television. So my voice I guess I was told this by a friend of mine the other day said, you know, your voice has seeped into the consciousness of the unconsciousness of the British public. And when people meet me for the first time they say I know you from somewhere I can't quite place where you're from. I know your voice You know, I've seen and then I say what I've done you know I've done X Factor Britain's Got Talent Live at the Apollo all star value fortunes, the prices, right catchphrase, loads of different TV shows, and radio commercials, TV commercials, games, you name it. I've done more or less all of it over 40 years, I've been constantly on on the on all the channels. And so people do know me my voice but they don't know me don't know me personally, or they don't know what I look like. So it's it's quite interesting that you can have that high level profile without having the all the bad stuff that goes with fame. Yeah, exactly.

Toby Ricketts

I was kind of surprised to see how many games you've done. And I was curious to ask about how you see yourself as a character voice. Yeah, I mean, in some senses, like I tell students, all all voiceover work is kind of a character. Like even when you're doing a straight corporate voiceover you're playing the part of the corporate straight voiceovers and how people normally talk. But for his or your game roles, like quite a departure from your, your sort of straight vo stuff like do you do accents and they do do realist voices do you do cartoon voices? Like how what's the scope of your kind of like, your your the range of your voiceover work?

Peter Dickson

Yes, you're right, dude, every voice job is an acting job. And I think sometimes the more and more that people will want you to be you. And I think particularly in commercials, they say we know you have to be a real they have to sound like an authentic person. A conversational style is very much in demand. But in terms of gaming, yes, I mean, I do all kinds of characters. I served on Americans. I've been zombies. I've done world war two pilots. I've been Russian submarine captains. I've done you know, fantasy characters, wizards warlocks, you name it in all ages and different accents. So I do love doing that though. That is for me, pure voice acting. And but it's just An aspect of voice acting like all of it is, and whether it's a corporate voice ever you're right, or whether it's a playing Russian submarine captain, you're playing somebody that's not you. And so I do, I don't really differentiate between it very much, I think it's probably not very helpful. So I think you need to sort of approach every job and give it the what it does, what it's designed, what you what you can give to it. So, I, I'm afraid, I can't really differentiate any of it. But I do love all of it. And probably, you know, I've been I've been a master of all, no jack of none, all my life. But I've always sort of taken the view that, you know, if I was just to concentrate on one thing, say, gaming, you know, I would probably be unemployed now, because these things go in cycles. So I've always likened my career to spinning plates, I've got seven plates spinning, promos, commercials, gaming, light, entertainment, television, corporate, audio, corporate video, you know, animation, you know, whatever it might be. So I'm going to keep all these things going as much as I can, because I don't differentiate between any of them. And I'm not pretending are an expert in all of them. But I think it to have an established career. When I had it, I'm not sure. That I don't think is quite the case now, because people are specializing in when I was sort of going through the peak of my career, I wanted to do all of it and be good at all of it. So I did. But it's an interesting question. Because nowadays, I think, with the advent of availability of people, in Digital Studios, all around the world. So I could people can hire you as well as they can hire me, and they didn't used to be able to do that. So I think nowadays, it's more important to have something one or two things that you specialize in, rather than being the, the jack of all trades and the master of none. So what do you specialize in? Well, it's

Toby Ricketts

interesting, because I've found I've fallen, I've fallen into a few different commercial categories. And I didn't expect to like in terms of like, you know, that there's commercial, which is, which is a category and I seem to have sort of fallen to that one quite well, which just happens to be a very well paying one, which was very fortunate indeed. But within that category, I seem to be hired mostly for luxury cars and watches. And it's weird that I just keep getting approached for those kind of work. And I wonder whether it's because, you know, you do a piece of work, which then resonates with with with any user on your show reel, and so people it gets out there, and then people see that and want to hire you for their one. And so it's just a rolling ball that just gathers snow, you know, as it goes down the mountain. Yeah, all weather, like, my voice though, the character I play for that particular voice of it, you know, does intrinsically link to that kind of like, you know, wealthy men like to hear this kind of voice or like your, your you sound like our target audience, for example, or something like that. So that's been kind of interesting. And, and more recently, I've, I've found that there are these non traditional kind of, they're not exactly categories and genres of voiceover, which is things like meditation, like conference openers, stuff like that, which is, which are kind of new genres which have crept up, and there seems to be people who are hiring just for that sort of stuff, like, especially conference openers, is very much like, there are conference companies that just do videos for conferences, and they often want to hire a voiceover to do their opening. So

Peter Dickson

I mean, the big missions, the mission statement open, like

Toby Ricketts

a three day conference of ophthalmologists in Chicago and they have a video saying Imagine if the world could see it or something you know, like it's that it's that thing that the big start video where brings everyone together and and they usually go that fear fear budget on them, because they're it's only one time use only be seen by a roomful of people, but they still pay quite well, because they have to set the right tone at the beginning of this conference. So but but there's a lot of things at play, like I was like to imagine, you know, that, that I'm at the conference, and the lights go down, and I've got the mic, and I'm talking to an eye, you have to be spellbinding, you have to actually fill these people's hearts with this excitement that they're on this three day adventure, you know, so like, really living those parts, I think is is a big part of of the voiceover thing. And what I like about these micro genres is you really get to kind of crystallize and imagine what the end person is going to feel from this what rather than finish which is very broad, you know,

Peter Dickson

well, it's critical. I think, most newbies to the business say, How do I how do I do this? How do I get more, more auditions, more bookings? I said, Well, you've got to put yourself in the position of someone who's listening to you know your audience, first of all, and as you rightly say, if you're doing a conference opening, you've got to really when you're performing imagine that audience in the darkened room listening to your and you need to know the music track what Now it's going to play out. There's no point in me projecting very, in a big way, if the music is, you know, very minimal and sort of droney. So I need to know what the producer intends the intention of the piece so that it matches the tone. And it's very important to know that because otherwise, you're just shooting in the dark. But you're right. You're more and more in commercial terms, you the producers, the buyers want you to sound like the person who's going to buy the product or service doesn't you know, you have to sound like you come from their world. And getting into that is the absolute key to success. A no doubt about it. You've got to sound like you come from that world, you got to sound like you know, you're talking about. You can't sound like you're an outsider, you've got to know your audience.

Toby Ricketts

Mm hmm, exactly. What else did I want to ask you about?

Peter Dickson

Yes, I'm having another McKellen, by the way. Oh, fantastic. Yeah, we're

Toby Ricketts

nearly out on this end as well. So it's a good time to refill

Peter Dickson

just a small one.

Toby Ricketts

Exactly. What do you have any routines? Do you have any things that that get you into the character because your your X Factor voice I like to, I can very I can instantly hear your X Factor voice before you do it? Because it's so kind of iconic in that way. Do you want to just give our viewers in case they haven't heard what your X Factor voice sounds like? It's alright. It's quite a character that you play like it's it's quite it's almost a cartoon character. Yeah, you know, it's a caricature, if you like it's not

Peter Dickson

a real voice. No, the voice grew from series, one of the X Factor, which was 16 years ago now, believe it. And if you listened back to me when I started, it was a much tamer beast, and it grew to every years. We really did. Yeah, it did. Because the show ratcheted up, and the production values increased year on year, and more money was spent up as it as the show is the format became more successful. ITV, the commercial broadcaster, decided this was a show that on Saturday night, they were going to spend money on. And it was it was a cash cow. And so they chuck more money and more money and everything went suddenly, from the small room to the big room to the big big room, the big studio, the lighting, the sound, the sight sets, all became much more much more kind of elaborate and much more glamorous. And as the shirt as the series progressed, I was, as a viewer was watching it, I thought, I've got to change my I've got to make myself I've got to go with this. So I'm became each year bigger and bigger and Brasher and ended up with me 16 years down the line in my voice sessions, you know, bleeding like a Bond villain from my eyes, and, and sweating. And literally, I had to have studio, whether it was in here or in London, wherever I did the voiceover I used to say to the to the studio people, I said, Look, when I come in, I want this studio chilled. Sure about 12 degrees, because when I'm going to go for it, I do go for it big time, I'm actually exerting myself so much that I would sweat and Puffin pant and go red in the face. And the veins of my neck would would come up and I said, Look, I can't do this in a Hot Studio has to be cold. And I need a towel in there as well. Because I'm going to be sweating like a pig oxygen I did. And so I that's how it happened. So every year got bigger and bigger. And nobody told me to do this. I just took it upon myself because I thought if they don't tell me, nobody gave me any, any guidance or advice. I just started to push the boat out Nietzsche, I pushed a bit more and I'd wait to see if anybody complained. Nobody did. And then it began to get gathered like mosque gathers, like a stone rolling stone gathers mass, it began to go to build its own momentum. And then I realized that people were actually enjoying my voiceover performances. They were sort of imitating me and taking, taking the, the voiceover of the show, as part of as one of the elements of the show. And it was very nice to see that I I just took it upon myself to make it what it was. So I'll give you an example of what it was like there's a big phrase on the show, which which is comes at the end of the title sequence, which usually was a recap of what happened on the week before and it ends with Carl offs, wonderful music, oh for tuna, which everybody now knows. And my famous line was, it's time to face thumb music and then to be a huge action It's a sort of graphic coming through London and smashing into Wembley, and they blister off and in Sparks. And they'd zoom in on from the back of the audience over the audience heads onto the stage, and the show would start. And so that was that was quite something. And I think it was quite, I wanted to make it as big and as bombastic and as sort of ridiculous as I possibly could. And was the show was that

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. And it's, it must sort of feel nice to be the one of the contributors to an icon, you know, has become iconic in the UK, that that that intro in that sequence, I imagined?

Peter Dickson

Yes, I think, you know, nobody knew it was going to be like that. And when I got the, got the job, it was very, sort of an unremarkable hiring because I was in America and a friend of mine, he was the sound supervisor on a show I'd been doing before in the UK called test the nation, which was kind of like an IQ test show with Philip Schofield. And Anna Robinson, who UK viewers will know. He, he rang me up and he said, I'm working on this new show called What's the working title of The X Factor? Nobody's ever heard of it. And they're looking for a voice to do it. And we can't find somebody that suitable. And I've worked with you recently. Would you like to have a go? And I said, Well, send me send me something. And I've looked at it. And he sent me this. They sent me this Vimeo link, and I looked at it and I thought, Oh, my goodness, this is, this is right up my street, I could definitely lend value to the show. So I emailed him back said yes, I'd be very interested. And they sent me a script, just to sort of have a go at it. I sent him some samples by on mp3, from from America. And next day, they hired me, I got the job for series, one of the X factor was brilliant. And never looked back.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, the rest is history. And, like, I think I feel like, you know, when you look at great performances that people like, when you look at it on YouTube, there are those you can see the audition tapes for certain, you know, iconic roles as they turned out. And you can always tell that the people are giving more than 100%. Like they're absolutely committed to the character like that. That's the sign of a really great performance is commitment to it to it, which you know, you

Peter Dickson

have to know glad you mentioned that word commitment is the word it is exactly. It's it's a committed committing yourself to the line fully, more than fully.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. And it works in other genres like, like, you look at the great news, any volunteers, it's because absolutely channeling, they're completely giving in to the feeling that music gives them and going with it. And it's exactly the same with VoiceOver I find the best performances you give a when you just let go and you go as far as you need to to get the ground.

Peter Dickson

We're not talking about shouting or bickering back there. But like, all performances, you're right. You have to be at one with the script and and be sympathetic to it. But give 100% It's almost like surrendering to it and commit commit to it. Yeah, you

Toby Ricketts

know why? on yourself or anything? No, no, no, it's

Peter Dickson

not, it's not going over there. I'm not I think people may misinterpret this by thinking, like, we need to go over the top. And that's not what it's about. It's about being in flow with the copy in sympathy with the copy, understanding your audience. And once you've done all that sort of processing, then you are committed to and you have a purpose, a sense of purpose to it. But committing to the lines, God Yeah, that's what it's all about. Whether it's a poem or a shouting on a TV show, it's just, it's being in in the right moment and understanding your purpose.

Toby Ricketts

Absolutely. So looking back over your your lengthy career, are there any pieces of work that really stand out for you and stuff that you're really proud of?

Peter Dickson

Oh, that's interesting. Yeah. I did a show, an animation series years ago, called Monkey test and it was was very well received in the UK dinner where that was when I think it did go worldwide actually, because I still get some residual payments from from from sales around the world, but it was an animation series produced by a friend of mine. And it was so well done. It was way ahead of its time. And it was it painted a rather dark picture of Britain in the 1990s but it was still it still stands up to scrutiny today. And it was one of those shows that has become a kind of a it's developed a cult followings. It's kind of like a bit culty but it's it's still there. It still gets shown on youtube if it's a what called monkey do this is that there's episodes on those clips on YouTube You monkey does,

Toby Ricketts

what character did you play with?

Peter Dickson

Well, I played the classically trained actor. Some might say it was, was typecasting. I was a voiceover artist who played the voiceover artist too, who really wants to be more wanted to be a classical actor. And he was always frustrated by the fact that he was always casting in a voice ever Oh, selling products that nobody wanted to buy. So either way, it's kind of art imitating life. And I often think back on that, I think, well, I'm actually I am actually I had that character. I've always been frustrated. I've always wanted to be a Shakespearean actor, but I never made I always end up selling furniture or shouting that cars off, or pizzas or whatever. And

Toby Ricketts

that's hilarious. And it is funny how you end up sort of coming back to those those things sometimes that? Yes, yeah. I've definitely found that like, in my voiceover career, like saying that you're going to do something or making a goal. Just lengthen. It never never works.

Peter Dickson

I never, I've never, you can set goals all your life, but obviously, life will throw you curveballs occasionally and you'll end up going down another weapon. Expected. Yeah, you don't know, never, I've never planned my career as such, I've never had a plan. And people watching this might be quite horrified. And the same time pleased about that. Because, you know, you just got to go with the flow sometimes, and the flow may not take you in the direction that you want to go, but is the direction that the market wants you to go because you're getting that work. No, I just don't, I don't think you should have too hard and fast and opinion about your career direction that is

Toby Ricketts

true, because I was going to say that setting goals at least gives you like the point at which you want to head towards you know, because if you if you don't know where you're going, then you're sure to get there. You know, it's that that whole thing of like, if you're just paddling aimlessly in the sea to nowhere, then you're you're just going to go around in circles. But if you do have that, that kind of island on the horizon that you're swimming towards, at least you'll make progress towards that island. But I think what you say is very true in terms of don't be too hard and fast with I have to do this and I have to do this. Like sometimes it's like if this great role comes up and it's not really in your genre, have a go at it, just do it and see where it listen

Peter Dickson

to what the market gives you, you know, the market will they will decide what you're good at. And if you don't know what you're good at, try everything. But some sometimes, at some point, somebody will say actually, this is where you should this is what you're good at, this is what you should be doing and don't fight it. In the Loop. There'll be certain veins will open up to you and you'll go Oh, actually, I hadn't thought of that. But actually this is working around getting a lot of work in this area and just go with it and may not be the area you even thought you'd be good at. But the market market will decide

Toby Ricketts

oh, there you go. Let I'm typecast as luxury cars and watches some of this is worse because

Peter Dickson

there are worse places to be. And you you you what I like about you is you work in all kinds of territories. You You Are you you've got a you're a master of accents. So you can you can work in the American market and in the Australian New Zealand market in Canada or wherever, wherever else you want to work. So you you adapt your accent Yeah, to the market.

Toby Ricketts

You're funnily enough, my biggest product is being British for Americans. So it's like Americans like me as a British guy. So it's um, it's because

Peter Dickson

it's because you don't sound too British or posh. Yeah, too threatening, or Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

something like that. Yeah, exactly. Like the accent I've created for my British kind of persona is is not actually a kind of a British accent that British people have. That's what it's the accent the American people think British people have got it very JMeter, isn't it?

Peter Dickson

I know. Isn't that funny?

Toby Ricketts

So I know, We're nearly out of time. But I wanted to ask you quickly about some I mean, obviously what what, what how we met and what binds us is gravy for the brain, the wonderful product of the voiceover career platform, which people watching this probably be familiar with. How did that all start? And how did that kind of the grow?

Peter Dickson

Well, it grew from a bricks and mortar business that Hugh Edwards and I started we, well, he came to me, I had worked with you as as a as a voice actor, and he was a director on a couple of games. And he said to me, you know, I'm fed up working with no, it wasn't working for me, but he said, um, there's a very small roster of people I work with, and it's quite limiting. In London, and, you know, it's an I try, I've tried, he said to bring new people in, but I ended up hiring people who have never done games before and they come in and they don't know what they're doing and I'm doing and they're practicing in front of clients. And that's not ideal when you've got somebody from Sony sitting in the in the booth and you're floundering as a newbie, not knowing what to do, because the the skill sets required for voice acting in games is quite different from the ones you need to know about for, for instance, doing a promo or commercials So he said to me, how do you fancy creating a course for people to do to do to learn how to do gaming voice? I said, Yeah, that sounds like a good idea. So we created this course, a bricks and mortar course for no more than about 10 people. And we ran these on couple of Saturdays every month in London, we hired a studio, we advertised, people came, and they absolutely loved it. And it was it was it was tiring and exhausting and time consuming. But we enjoyed teaching. And so we then reached the natural conclusion as you would, where we we'd like to be more demand than we could feel filled. So we wanted to reach more people. And so the only way to do that is to go on online. So we developed a rudimentary, it wasn't called gravy for the brain back then. But it was called something else. But we had an online course as well as the bricks and mortar course and, and then we thought, well hang on a minute, we could branch this out into other areas of voice episode, corporate, commercial, and then teach Studio, you know, building and engineering and all the rest of that goes with with with their voiceover career and we so kind of grew sort of exponentially from that point. And gravy for the brain was born. Not not not the, the name actually is quite interesting, because it was it was born out of the desire to create an online business that would educate people in all kinds of things, not just voiceover X was going to be a platform that could teach you how to do you know how to knit or how to make pottery or be a waiter or whatever it might be. So grieving for the rain was the sort of umbrella concept. But then we thought we know nothing about pottery or waiting a table. And that was a bit too sort of vague. So then we would be really crazy, the platform the and the URL and the name so stark. And people always ask us why why you call grave as the brain? Why is it not got any voice ever reference? And that's why because we were intended to be a much broader church than it eventually ended up but but in a way, you know, graves The reason it's so unusual name that people you know, remember it?

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, yeah. Which is kind of the most important thing these days in the in the sort of the busy sea of the internet, trying a catchy thing that people can just remember which they've seen somewhere. Yeah. Yeah, well, that's fantastic. It's so similar to your original courses to the voice academy that I run. And the thing that I, I always I get so much energy from is the fact that people who do come on these courses and people who braved the rain, it's such a thrilling job in a way like when you have a go at voiceover and especially in the bricks and mortar studio, that's a really fancy studio, and there's people listening and everything. It's like an adrenaline rush the same as going in a fighter jet or something like it really, really is. It moves people like to their to their core,

Peter Dickson

oh, um, we've had people crying and our courses, not online, I don't see that. Most people are crying. But I don't know why they cry. But they came into our into our course. And what we used to do, this was a really fascinating process. We took 10 People in at nine o'clock in the morning in the studio, we said $7. And here's the script, it was a piece of gaming copy. And as we asked each of them to go to the microphone, and read the lines, and we recorded them, which they did. And then we took them through a whole process of teaching them how to do what they needed to do, how to create characters, and they we would do workshops with them and talk to them about committing to the line that we talked about earlier on and being full of purpose and commitment. And at the end of the day, by five o'clock they'd been through the wringer and, and had learned an awful lot in those those hours with us. And then we got to do exactly the same copy again at the end of the day. And they both they all read the copy the end of the day and we recorded them. And then by six o'clock the engineer had chopped by all these pieces together back to back each each person 10 times. And we sat them down in a comfy chair is it now to demonstrate how far you've come in these eight hours, I want you to sit down and have listened to your initial performance back to back with your final performance exactly the same copy. See what you think. And that was for me, the the real lightbulb moment for for me and for them because they listened to their initial performance which was work on like, it was all the right words in the right order, but no purpose, no commitment, no intention. And then the second reading In most cases, was so dramatically different, that they just blew them away they thought and every, every time we human, I would sit and watch this and listen. And we'd see their faces just go, Oh, my God, this is exactly been a fantastic experience. And we we really understand now, what you mean when you say commitment, purpose and understanding of the copy and getting into the character. And so that contrast was so stark, that they went away, and they never forgot.

Toby Ricketts

And the ability for them to take that skill into their own lives, that's the big thing that I find like that people suddenly have control over their voice, which they didn't. And when they arrived on the course, and our voice is what we used to communicate with all the other humans who we come across, like it's their primary communication medium. So I feel like it's so important to learn how to use your voice effectively.

Peter Dickson

I can agree, yeah, and to and to be a good listener, as well, because, as an actor in gaming, you never ever in you're never very rarely, when you're performing. In soloists, you're always in the studio in your own invariably, but you do see the other characters that you're sort of your your lines are against. And I always encourage most of the students in our courses to, to understand the context that they're in and to read the lines into the of the previous character you're working against in your head. So you can well before you read your line, you read the the other characters line that you're reacting to. So the you you're just not, you're not, we're not talking in a vacuum. As such, we are reacting off what they've said. It's a genuine, real. So it's genuinely you're listening in your head to what the other character is saying. And then you go there, just read your lines and ignore what they've because you need to know what's gone before.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. Fantastic. Well, I thank you so much for for staying up and indulging all my questions. Have you got to chat about voiceovers? Well, we haven't covered that you wanted to cover?

Peter Dickson

Well, let me submit a few notes. I'm just going to say very quickly go through. Yeah. Right. So. So I'll just go through this very quickly. There's a scramble to home studios home studios are now the thing everybody wants them. Everybody has them people are comfortable using them remotely. The USA UK differences are quite stark. The UK is now caught up in the USA. So most UK, voice actors have home studios now and producers are happy to employ them from home. Remote studios are now here to stay. So that's important. So studio quality your own home studio is very important. So pay attention to how it sounds. If you don't know how it sounds, ask someone Rob be gravy will help you to iron out any kinks in your studio sound. You need to get connectivity working. So whatever you choose whether it's source connect or ipdtl, or whatever it might be, you will need. Now that ISDN is now defunct and dead, you will need to have a good broadband connection and

Toby Ricketts

be able to know how to use it know how to use. Yeah. And now how

Peter Dickson

to use more than one piece of software. So have several several beating or be proficient in several. So I've got three here got source connect ipdtl. And I also use other proprietary software that I can link to other studios with

Toby Ricketts

this video call and session link Pro and there are clean feed there's so many feeds

Peter Dickson

Very good. Yeah, yeah, they're all good. They all have their drawbacks. Source Connect for USA standard is the Yeah, is the one they want. So yeah, you can also you can get source tech standard, I believe on on a day to day basis as well.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, this is a subscription based I think it's like weekly or monthly or something. So it's just not part of the session fee really, you could

Peter Dickson

just and the reason they want that is because the algorithm is different. They want that there's a stability with source connect standard that they're using with the free version that you get good stability on the on the signal. Demos. Interestingly, I've noticed that agents are happy to have longer sequences on demos, commercial demos particularly used to be a trend where you have 10 seconds, even shorter snatches

Toby Ricketts

down to about four seconds. It seems their demos are so quick.

Peter Dickson

But it's going the other way. The the trend now is to conversational everyday voices so they want to hear your want to hear more, maybe 15 or even 20 seconds. Which is a trend apparently narrative deliveries probably more narrative delivery. Yeah, longer demos in every genre so used to be you know, you demo. We've been there longer than a minute now. They're getting one minute nine minute 30. And for sort of animations and for corporate, they want two minute demos. So they're getting longer. conversational style very soon still much at the forefront authentic voices. Yes. So, as I said earlier, because producers can hire people from around the planet they don't want me to do in Australia or New Zealand voice accent or whatever it might be. Other than your case to Tony, Toby, you're British voice is so good. People love to hire you. Real accents are very much. And also non binary accents. I see a lot on scripts

Toby Ricketts

that is so different. The inclusivity is a huge thing now.

Peter Dickson

I don't. So I've seen a few auditions come in, where they don't want you to sound too masculine. They don't want the deep sort of masculine voice, they want something slightly non binary. That's an interesting trend.

Toby Ricketts

And also, there's this trend towards like accents to that. But then they're not. Exactly yeah, it's accent from nowhere sort of thing, which, yeah, so I've specialized in over the last few years. But

Peter Dickson

where do you where do you place your nonspecific accent, it's sort of halfway between America,

Toby Ricketts

yeah, to mid Atlantic, but sometimes they want they don't want just British American, they want a bit of Australian in there as well, or sometimes a bit of Chinese, for example, like English as a second language, as well as the British and the and the American, which is kind of which, which is usually a case of just flattening the vowels and making it a bit more percussive. So it just sounds different. But I'd like to stress in my I did an excellent webinar earlier this month, in terms of like, you can't just pretend like you know, the accents and smash them together. Because it sounds like Dick Van Dyke and they're above, it's like, it just sounds all over the place and kind of awkward. So you have to stumble with doing both of the accents. And then just subtly choose to go one side of the line or the other on different lines, just to keep it sort of interesting sounding, you know. But it's a very interesting new growth area, this whole global accent thing, because of the, you know, international companies and corporate interests, having bases and lots of countries around the world wanting to do one video.

Peter Dickson

Yeah. So looking into future trends, I think, certainly authentic voices, or people who sound authentic, as you, as you've demonstrated, you can do are definitely going to be hired. Auditions, if you're auditioning for work, I think, because now we have the pay to play the numbers of people auditioning. And I wouldn't be too concerned about that, because 90% of them, you know, probably aren't going to get hired. So if you're good, you're going to get you're in the top 10%, you're going to be going to be at a chance of being hired. But I think your auditions need to be more daring and more different for everybody else. So you need to find something in the copy that will enable you to stand out. And be yourself. Don't just read the words, perhaps do one take where was the entire script as it's written, and do another take, which is your interpretation of that copy and humility.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. And Mark Roy, who I interviewed last month, his big thing was just be noticed. Like, it doesn't really matter what you do with the copy because it's going to change in the session, but get noticed. And if they like your voice, like they'll, you know, they're hearing 200 people read the same lines, do something different. Yes, such good advice.

Peter Dickson

You're going to jump you're going to jump out at them. So yes, yeah. So humanize it, personalize it to your own way and try and again, but that making overacting but make it sound authentic and but but do your own interpretation.

Toby Ricketts

Or be yourself like really honestly be yourself because the more reviews

Peter Dickson

the more of you that shows up in your reads the more you'll book

Toby Ricketts

totally Yeah, absolutely. I definitely didn't intend this trip. Well fantastic. I mean it's it's Merry Christmas again, I've got one sip left. It's been able to catch up and what does the What does Christmas look like in the Dixon household?

Peter Dickson

Well, I'm still I usually go to Ireland where are where our families are from, but I won't be going this year because of travel restrictions and various other family issues but I will be staying at home with my wife my son, my two sons are coming to stay with us so it will be four of us Christmas Day and New Year. Who knows I never planned anything so fantastic. I usually I usually don't go out on New Year's Eve because it's usually chaos but I will I like staying at home I like to fire and and have a nice have a whiskey and stuff fairly quiet New Year's Eve usually and and then wake up on New Year's Day. Rather smug with myself that I don't have a hangover. Well, fantast anyway, very much. It'd be it's lovely Christmas. Thank you for asking me. Speaking. Indeed. Cheers. Cheers.

Interview with Character voicing legend Marc Graue

Mark Graue is a legend in the voice industry, growing up in Hollywood around the movie studios, and now with his own studio in Burbankwhich has seen some of the biggest stars on and off the screen, grace it’s walls. Today on VO LIFE, I chat to Marc about:

 

-          How people are now recording from home has this affected your voice studio business

-          What are some tips for people recording at home?

-          What separates pro talent from amateurs with home sessions

-          How do you see yourself as a voice actor?

-          Is versatility the key to characters?

-          How has the role of actor changed?

-          Do you have a bank of characters or customize the voice for every gig?

-          What are the classic levers we can pull to create different characters?

-          How should people approach casting in the modern context?

-          Why you should listen to direction in the session

-          Be prepared but not rehearsed

-          Is doing voices still fun after 50 years?

-          How did you break into the industry?

-          Working hard vs being ‘discovered’

-          How to get noticed in your auditions

-          The difference between doing a voice and being a voice

-          The state of gaming VO

-          Is it important to play games to understand them?

-          Video games and voice health

-          Why listening is so important as a voiceover

-          Where do you source work?

-          Agents and the union

-          Are videogames casting and recording in house?

-          How to bring realism to videogames voicing

You can find more about Marc and his training at https://www.marc-graue.com/

Here is the transcript:

Toby Ricketts

Welcome to gravy for brain Oceania and VO life. This is the chat where I talk to the big names in voiceovers, the movers and shakers, the people who are really making things happen. And today, I'm so excited to announce. We've got a 35 year veteran in the industry. He's got a studio in Burbank, California. It's a total industry legend, a voice coach, winner of voice of the year, the one voice Conference USA this year and is about to be inducted into the savez Lifetime Achievement Award Hall of Fame. It's Mark. Don't introduce myself. It's Marc Graue. How are you doing?

Marc Graue

I'm doing great. I was thinking, Who is he talking about? Wow, I had no idea. I had all that going for it ask for my money down it. Exactly. Yeah.

Toby Ricketts

I didn't even get on to the second page. How you doing there in Burbank?

Marc Graue

I am doing so well. Actually. It's life is good. Yeah, absolutely. It's the world is a little topsy turvy and kind of upside down, as we all know. But as far as the voice voiceover world, it seems to be going very well for a lot of us, for most of us actually disappears. But it's yeah, it's good.

Toby Ricketts

Absolutely. Yeah. How's the the COVID sort of end the work from home thing. I mean, it's been great for voiceovers that already work at home. As far as studios goes, it put a pressure on you in terms of running studios?

Marc Graue

we still have larger set like a lot of localization and localization being where they'll take a Korean Chinese, just whatever it may be, whether it be a game or Netflix dubbing, that kind of stuff. And we'll go so there's still a lot of that. The studio has stayed busy, we're approved, sag approved for COVID. So we even have electric motors on the microphones, stands. So the engineer doesn't even have to go in, he just pushes go up and set it do all of those good stuff. I've never even heard of such a thing. Yeah, it's good. So it's good. It definitely if nothing else, for people at home, it certainly is up the ante meeting that where you used to have, you know, like a crappy USB mic or something. Now, people are actually who I need to kind of jump on the back and get upgraded a little bit. And and they do they're still, you know, that element of people that don't assume that it takes, you know, virtually no investment at all. It's like, well, you know, is there any way I could do this on my phone? It's like, well, yeah, that's, that's gonna go really good with a big client. You know, they hear me now. You know, but I think I think a lot of people have, you know, they really have upped the ante a bit at home and you're noticing more and more copy coming across with actual specs from the client, if you're recording at home, this is what we would like to see you have large diaphragm I can do even to like, you know, like, like a u 87. Which is pretty cost prohibitive for most people. But you know, what, TLM 103? What kind of mic pre are you using? Don't want to, you know, to to, actually, here are some traps stuff in front of your booth with no, you know, no speaking lights, speaking being very loud. The thing is to also in this room, if you have source connect, use it first Do not wait for a session and then go, Oh, I've never actually used it. Because that's not that's not the time for a tutorial, I've actually seen a couple of clients where the VO guys have lost the gig, because they weren't, you know, it's not it actually what they're doing now is they'll actually want a snapshot of your source next showing that the port is open meaning that it's been forwarded it's all up it's running, because I can't tell you how many people will I downloaded the program and it's like, yes, but it doesn't it looks nice, but it's not doing anything.

Toby Ricketts

It's not Skype and Skype. Yeah, I've heard that there's a worldwide shortage of Sennheiser four one sixes for that very reason that everyone's scrambling

Marc Graue

you know, it seems like there's a shortage of everything at this point. You know why I can't why there would be a shortage of that I have no it's like yes all of these people in the meeting when I need it for 16 Oh my god there's 1000s of them you know it's like they're at the door was George's shotgun mic I evidently there are there are shortages of all kinds of things seem to take a little bit longer to get but it's you know, the thing is too is you know your stuff know your system know what's going on. So that that becomes its secondary it's no different when I'm coaching for that becomes muscle memory. It's like you're not even thinking in redundancy is not a bad thing. If there's an issue with something if this isn't it, have a plan okay, you know what, I've had that happen where source connect just would not work. We tried source Connect Now that work. I've had other sessions where it wouldn't work at all ever. This is unusual. I didn't know I guess there are two different platforms it sorters connect one for PC and one for Mac. And if you have them interchanging with each other, sometimes there can be issues I guess with went because it goes to their servers. And so I've had So where it's like I know tell you what, why don't we do a zoom session, you can direct me. And I'll just track the sessions in Pro Tools and send you the session. Oh, great. Session saved, you know. So that's that's all just

Toby Ricketts

redundancy is one of the things that really does separate the sort of men from the boys if you like in terms of like being a professional voiceover artist, because you, you've been around long enough to to know what can happen in the session. And you don't want to do that again. So you always have a backup plan, like having a second interface. Because I've had two interfaces now that have spontaneously you go to turn off. It's just there's just no sound.

Marc Graue

I don't know what happened. That's, that's brilliant. That's I even at the studio, I've always even if it's a very seasoned engineer, been there 20 years before you'll go home, even check, talk back. I'll give you a great example. We had Bill Shatner now, actually, Bill now is great, because he's been in so many times, he's fine. And But initially, we were just a bit touchy about things. And so that's not an individual you want to go. Whoa, this isn't recorded right now. It's like, no, no, no, no, no. What had happened was we had the clients come in, and of course, because it was William Shatner, and we've got a room full of people in the control room. Someone did come in, set their briefcase down on the talkback button. Well, unbeknownst to me, I'm up in front of the sweats breaking out going, God, there's levels. Like, can I hear anything anymore? We're checking the arms. Oh, my God. Okay. And it's like, you know, it's Shatner sitting there, you know, are we ready to go and it's like, and then I've, you know, like, I'm getting right on the verge of calling by Bo takich. To get in, you know, look, we're gonna have to do so they're moving to another room and turned around and went, Oh, we were right. So ever since that we know how things around the target that you can't do that.

Toby Ricketts

So yeah, in a sense, like problems like having having issues in the booth like and things crop up, like that is the best thing because it makes you that much stronger every time I find like, as long as you do learn from the mistakes and and put things in place. And like my mind traveling kit now has so many little solving connectors, tape and problems and solving stuff. You know, it gives

Marc Graue

you a beautiful set of veins in your forehead.

Toby Ricketts

Again, a receding hairline and grayness. So, onto the onto the sort of the voice area, you are very sort of legendary as a character was such a huge sort of collection of voices that you've that you've created and curated over the years, is that sort of how you see yourself, do you do commercial sort of straight stuff as well, although straight stuff is kind of a character as well. You've put yourself in the industry?

Marc Graue

Well, I mean, primarily character stuff that's always been the running gag is I never play the guy next door, I'm usually the guy that kills the guy next door, you know, which is fun, you know, the lobby even have a real that's just evil guys, because I do a lot of that. But it's it's a primarily character. I mean, the, you know, I do have commercial clients that I work with gotten, you know, on a consistent basis. And, you know, like, we were just exchanging that story, which is coming out for Toyota. So, but you really, it's just being prepared. I'll give you an example. When I was booked for DCS legends of tomorrow at a TV show your that should be again, I'm thinking Oh, okay. And obviously, it's probably a woman who's busiest and it's on a federal clock, you know, galley chi and stuff. And I go in, and it's an homage to ET, and it's this adorable little character named gumball. And all it is is nine pages of ADR and every single loop says effort you know, and I'm thinking he should have got the right guy. Did they misspell? You know, is it misspelled something? It turned out five, but it was definitely you know, shakes the cage a little bit. You feel like this is not really, you know, the other stuff where it's like a no brainer, fine. Yep, let's do it. And I mean, my direction is usually can you make him sound like he just killed this person and eat his bones? It's like, Oh, okay. You know, you really should quit living in your mom's basement discover curls. But anyway, sorry.

Toby Ricketts

Funnily enough, I looked, I looked at one of those clips, just as preparation for the interview. And I was thinking, Is that is that mark making the noise for the little T things? And it was, I mean, I guess that is the key to, to, to being a character voice artist is his versatility, right? I mean, it's being able to really take on anything and not just have a go at it, but like, give it 150% 200 million

Marc Graue

you always have things that you're much much better at a great example is kids voices. I can't you know, me doing a kid's voice sounds like I'm trying to lure them into the van with a candy bar. Not going to work. So usually that kind of stuff I'll pass on because there's people that just nail that and are spectacular. And you know, another thing you know if it's in your wheelhouse The interesting thing too, is we've now gotten to a point where we're so segmented and I mean, if it's, you know, a an Asian voice than it has to be an Asian American actor, which I understand that but at the same time me acting is acting I mean, that's why you're being hired as an actor to do different, not maliciously, I don't mean NetBeans spirit or I have just recently done a project was pretty big. And they had me speak Cherokee. And they had a guy on the line that said, Can you so I did. And the heaps in American Union he goes, Wow, that was amazing. It was honestly I would know I be he goes, that was great. And I go well, thank you so much for being there. I was kind of cloning what he was doing. And somebody posted that in Boise, Idaho, Cooper hit the fan over that. It's like, How dare you? You're not an indigenous person. You bastard. That's Deadites typical white people like you that didn't was think, Whoa, whoa, I wasn't malicious. It's not. Well, you should have been it was like, but I'm sorry, when you've got a large company on the line. This was initially begins with D. It's not like you go, why not doing that? Get a? I mean, it's like, you'll go Oh, yeah. Okay, whatever you guys want either pay me a lot of money. And it's like, so I know, in retrospect, I guess I should have probably thought more down those lines now that I've been doing this something that that didn't, didn't used to be a consideration. And I don't mean that from a mean spirited aspect. I was just like, Okay, it's an anti job. Yeah, yeah. It's

Toby Ricketts

something I think a lot of us have wrestled with in the in the voice industry. And that the the role of actor has changed from you know, someone playing someone else to sort of like it has put restrictions on who you who you can play. And instead of just having a go at it, there's all these other considerations, like, have they tried to source this from a legitimate source? Is there some kind of bias involved, which makes it so much difficult, more proposition, you know, that the kind of brief has changed as far as

Marc Graue

everything varies very much. And you'll even see that in the in the actual copy direction, saying specifically what they, you know, and to me, I mean, I understand that or, or don't understand. But I think sometimes you can put too many rules on things. And I'll give you a great example is, evidently with the Academy Awards. Now, at least, I believe it's 20 to 25% of the cast has to be under everything, and I get that I understand. But what's happened is writers are going but now I'm going to I sit down and meet rather than letting the creative I have to go, Okay, wait a second, I have to do this and this and this. And there's now very specific rules I have to play by rather than just writing whatever's coming from my heart. And I don't I can't imagine, you know, a black individual and Asian American, I mean, all of those things. They've dealt with ridiculous shit. No doubt I I'm not trying to parlay that make that small by any means. It's just find the it's probably very rough, though, for a writer, you know, somebody had mentioned like, Well, what about you know, the godfather? I mean, it's an Italian family. How am I supposed to do you know, and I mean, it's just a story is a story, you know, and the thing I think we're starting to, you know, we all are humans, we all you know, kind of walk up right? We have very similar interests, we fall in love, we fall out of love, we get our feelings hurt, we don't get our feelings hurt. We're striving to do well for ourselves and our families. And, you know, when there's so there's kind of a common thread and sadly, that common thread seems to be kind of dissipating and very segmented, you know, I just like I was laughing talking to somebody the other day going, when it's gotten to the point where he should be able to buy a keyboard that has a fuck Yuki. You know, which is sad, but true.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, absolutely. So I mean, and the tricky thing, I'm just just to do this a little bit more is the is the is how some of this appears to be like retrospective like and I feel I felt for The Simpsons voices going through that controversy about 12 months ago with like, having to apologize for characters they played decades ago, when times were different and and being accountable for that in the modern day. Seems a bit rough. I mean, I guess they can they can say like, we won't do that again, because we realize now as you know, in the Hmong context, it's it's insensitive. But yeah, that's that's kind of a tricky. Yeah.

Marc Graue

Well, at the time, it wasn't, it was acceptable, and it wasn't meant in maliciously at all. It wasn't like, oh, well, here, this other person people off it was like, you know, it was like, oh, okay, sure. All under the care. I mean, you know, look at that, you know, even going back to Mel Blanc with things like, you know, Speedy Gonzalez and stuff. I mean, now Oh, my God, of course not. But at the time, you know, and things have changed, you know, very much. And again, now, you know, I'm not Hispanic, I'm not Latino. So I don't know how that affects, but as a white guy, I never looked at that as like, ooh, that's where that's bad. Or that's, you know, that's Mexico. We just thought it was a cute cartoon character.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. So onto cartoon characters. And I mean, you know, come out with a broad range of characters. Do you spend time kind of like creating characters and then putting them in some kind of bank? Or is it always sort of on the fly and you're pulling different handles, depending on what the gig is?

Marc Graue

It really depends on what the gig is. And where I mean, you have an idea, I call it roadmapping copy direction, and I know they'll probably get in trouble over this one direction, though, is is so specific. Sometimes I always look at it liken it to Pirates of the Caribbean where well, it's not exactly rules. It's more guidelines and Really, I mean, if you've been doing this a while we've all seen or heard a spot the direction was very specific. And you were hurt or sad when really that's where they were, that's not even close to what the direction was. So if I think a lot of the time you know from your heart you know, but but look at the copy look at the you know, it's that classical knew who are you speaking to? How many people but but that point, how is it written? Is it written, where it's kind of, you know, smart as is written like a TED talk, where you got the mic coming down, and you're very passionate. And, you know, it really depends on the style of stuff you're doing commercials are all a call to action, CTA they want you to do something, they want you to go to the phone, go on the internet, get off the couch, buy something. So leave me feeling good. I mean, even the spots that run here with Sarah McLaughlin, and you know, that awful spot with the dogs and they show him what it's like, and you're $19 a month, by Biffi, a third leg so he can walk in a circle. I mean, let's try that. I'm sorry. That's terrible. But the thing is, again, it's very awful. It's a but here's the solution. And here's the end, even childhood cancer. Here's the problem, you know, your St. Jude's, it's like it's terrible. But you know what, here's the solution. And so you're leaving me feeling good. Same thing with with, you know, whether it being animation or video games, you need to connect with what that audience is, if it's a much younger, sweeter, you know, very, you know, like a kid's thing for Nick Jr. for Disney. It's very sweet. It's very non threatening. We years ago had done Hulk Hogan's rock wrestling. All the wrestlers and a brother, this is what we're gonna do. All right, we got to find the bad guy and stop them. And they don't got this, you know, so the wrestlers came in, they did 26 episodes, they went to test it and all the kids are going mommy's y'all. Hey, listen, you should. So they had to recast the entire thing to tone it down a bit, because it was it was just too intense. You know, so hit him, you know, things have changed. I mean, that's changed drastically, you know, as far as you know, this style of stuff and language and all of that kind of thing. But it's really, it's just identifying with that character and the personification of physicality. Absolutely. I mean, I'm all over the place. It looks like I'm having a seizure or something. You know, but it, you know, that comes through, it's like, I tell people, you know, if you put smile on the copy doesn't mean okay, I'm smiling. Now. I know physically smile. Okay, there and that will come through your voice. Hmm.

Toby Ricketts

What are some of the other the classic kind of character levers you can pull? I know, you do a great YouTube video where you take a red character, and then you make him like a little guy, and then you become a blue collar guy. And like, that's one. So Libra is sort of like age and size. Are there any other kind of obvious levers that when you're trying to tweak a character you can explore?

Marc Graue

Sure? Well, I think I think again, um, attitude for one, you know, age also, I mean, the thing is, there are such subtleties within like, age, people go, okay, he's an old man, they immediately go to you know, yard kind of thing or a gets even more not get out my yard, you know, kind of thing where it's, you know, it's, it just depends. But most older people now don't sound that way. You know, know, if it's a cartoon, a cartoon is just that it's an animated character. So sometimes they want that there's a lot of time you Adult Swim stuff, they want much more? They want realism. So what would it what would a person that age, sound like? And again, it's, it's sometimes sticking with what you do, like, you know, I'm an older guy now, obviously. So like me doing an 18 year old boys, it's not gonna happen. You know, it's just, it's better to pass. I mean, you could try and debit, it's just, it really isn't going to work for that, you know, so why, why waste the agent's time and a client's time, you know, but at the same time, I love it when they're very specific and go, well, the age of this character is 43. I'm sorry, that we got your idea was great. But it was definitely pushing 44. I mean, it's like, well, you know, there's not that many differences in certain age, you know, areas like that, where it's like, what's the difference, really. And really, it's, you know, the key now, especially, is to do something memorable. Because everything I come from an era where we still use like voiceover gypsies, you'd go to casting directors office, you'd go to your agents, you'd go to the buyer, and you'd actually as you made the rounds, you'd walk in the casting director Hey, Mark, how you doing? Well, we work together on Oh, yeah, and foots in the door. And you know, now you're relegated to being an mp3 so that the essence of you needs to shine through that mp3, you're not there to work the room, you know, so that when they hit Play show, even in your slate, and I don't mean going off on some you know, I've heard people where the slate I think was longer than the piece itself, but just like hey guys, how you doing great character, you know, hope I hear from you, you know, I'll shut up now. Let's get on with this. You know, and give them a few different tapes. You know, give mix it up a little bit. Look at an audition. That's Your chance, as you know, monologue night on camera school is like, hey, let's give it up for it. You're up in the light comes on, it's yours, you know, so So you That's your chance to bowl them over, there really isn't any right or wrong. It's what you feel you should do. That's what you should do.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, that's so interesting. I hadn't really revisited that. Because when I first got started in voiceover, I did a couple of in person auditions, you know, with casting directors, when I lived in a big city before I moved out into the middle of nowhere. And it was a fundamentally different experience, because they were there. And you could tell from like, with their faces, whether you were doing a good job or not, and sort of change it on the fly. But now it is completely blind. You know, you're recording this a day or two before they listen to it. So you really have no reading.

Marc Graue

Yeah. And even without you get feedback on the spot, wonderful, love what you're doing, pull back a little bit, if you can, let's play up that Gil and say, Oh, great, thanks. Because it's, you know, that direction is invaluable. And that's why live sessions are wonderful. Now, that doesn't mean that I agree all the time with with, you know, necessarily with you kind of going, okay, sure, I'll be there. They're the boss. That's what they want. They they have an idea of the overall picture. So they know what's going on. We're just hired hands. It's like doing a little piece of this. And it's like, they know how that's going to fit into the overall thing. And we're just kind of like, oh, okay, you're sure its own? Sure. You know, and it's not, it's not unusual to ask you, can I just give you another take that felt at the end, but they'll almost always go? And of course, you know, absolutely not what Jake, that's it now shut up. You don't

Toby Ricketts

know who I am? Yeah, I think and I think it's really useful to have those sessions where a direction comes completely out of left field, and it goes completely against your instincts, when you've actually got the gig and you're just like, what, really, I can't I'll do it, I'll do it, you know, and you give it to them. And then you see the final spot. And you're like, that was the right call, I didn't realize the pictures were going to be like,

Marc Graue

that brings up a very interesting thing. And that is a lot of people will get, you know, they I've had a number of people you probably to ask when you get the copy, usually, as you're walking in the door, you know, there's like, here it is, here's, you know, this is the rewrite whatever, but be prepared. It's like when I was doing you know, like, even going back to like Avatar, the cartridge, I wouldn't read the script. And it wasn't because I was missing the script by the fish. We do smell that, you know, by God. I mean, you know, it was because I didn't want that set. You know, what do you mean, you don't want that laugh? Don't you know what that laugh brings to the you know, and your brains going. But that lab, I put the laugh in, it was supposed to go there, and you start getting, you know, very chill. It's the same situation as if you get an audition, and it's got links to YouTube. I always suggest don't listen to those first lay down a few ideas of yourself, then go back and listen. Otherwise, you're just doing a bad impression of what you just heard. And it's entirely you know, if it's a voice match, of course, you know, then you need to listen and get down all the subtleties and stuff. But voice matches are dead on not Well, it's pretty close. But that doesn't count. It's got to be dead on. But what happens is your brain starts with no, they put in more of a pause. No, they have that kind of crap. So they drop off at the end like that. Like that. Okay. And so when you read all of that said, it's like this or you're like that. And that's just like, it's like, yes, if he had Tourette's, sorry. There's not a lot of filters here. I apologize.

Toby Ricketts

No, it's true. I one of the best pieces of advice in terms of you know, going into a session is be prepared but not rehearsed. Because rehearsal kills that kind of, there's something you get from the first read that's like a spark of freshness that you cannot replicate after that first read. And we've all had

Marc Graue

that where you do that and go through three zillion takes, and they go, yep, they ended up going with the first day.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. Yeah, everyone's had that experience yet. So speaking of those sort of sessions that do go on for 300 takes when you know they're going to use the first one. This is a really fun gig. I think that's the one of the big things I've never heard an occupation spoken of. as highly as also in terms of just having fun. Like it really does not feel like work. If you've been doing it for 35 years. Is the magic still there? Like is it still fun? It was

Marc Graue

actually the living has been closer. It's almost been almost 5050

Toby Ricketts

you go. Obviously that video is 15 years old, and I might just

Marc Graue

Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's yeah, it's sadly as it's true. Yeah, it's, you know, like anything else, you there is a certain amount of birth. I don't think you still retain the excitement of you know, I remember my brother is a musician. And he was like, Hey, man, we're, we're in town. Do you want to come down to the studio is like, Absolutely not. I mean, when all day. I mean, like, you know, it easy. He's all like, well, this is really cool. It's like, No, it's not my life. You know, it's like my kids. You know, their friends are like, can we go to the studio? God, that's so cool. My kids are like, Oh, it sucks. It's boring. You know, and if you're born in it, you kind of I was actually born in Hollywood of a Queen of Angels. My dad used to do News Channel Five here. So I grew up up I'm a lot there with dinosaur and Bob Hope and all these guys. So to me that was like, Okay Daws Butler was my godfather he used to do a live puppet show is Stan Freeburg golf time for BD EBD boys. And I remember sitting there was it while I was very young night for maybe five, and just enamored, it was like, wow, this is so cool. You know, these guys are great, you know, and watch them rehearse, you know, worries that they had, at that point, they didn't have stage lights. So they have these massive pieces of plywood spotlights. I mean, just so these poor guys are working at night, you know, it's got to be 300 degrees and sweating. And he's like this. And as he's talking like this, all of a sudden that you could see the puppet starting to go, oh, abd chef. And I remember thinking, this is so cool. It's puppets and bad language, you know? And of course, my mom's like, You're never going back. That's, you know, I thought it was the coolest thing ever. You know, I didn't at that point, you really have any idea with that? That's what I would end up doing. But no, it's been a it's a spectacular idea. As far as stealing how, you know, I still absolutely love what I do. There's no doubt about it. There's times it becomes overwhelming. There is the business aspect of it that you do need to deal with, you know, and sometimes that's not as much but it's like any other business. Not a lot of fun. You know, but overall, yeah, I can't think of it. I mean, this is really, it's all I've ever done in my entire adult life. You know, paid for let's say two divorces, three kids, we call it four houses. And I'm still over.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, so what was your first sort of like, what would you say was your big first big break into the industry? Can you can pin it on a certain event or a gig?

Marc Graue

Well, it depends I can't it whether it's the first one for studio wise for engineering, was I was I had be asked my way into a big music studio called Cherokee way back when that when this was like the Mecca. I mean, all of the cars albums and journey and Michael Jackson and Azia match. I mean, it was just me. In fact, when I first went in interview, I almost knocked Pat Benatar over it was like, oh my god, I had not a clue. As far as the music part at all was always watched but they decided they wanted to open a media studio doing voiceover stuff. So I actually talked Warner Brothers Records into bringing Van Halen for their first album, then came in the whole thing to do spots was high price talent they did the thing this guy is the I've told the story a zillion times but he was looking to patch an effect and well you know, man, if you do this and he turns around in front of this roomful of people that goes I'd appreciate it if you'd shut your mouth and stay out I said I was like you know right side let it knock him off the chair left side just said sit here and shut up mark so I did and it was like I you know that I listened to i We got you know, this is Van Halen This isn't now it's like I mean it's it's good but it's not. So I put I went in and voice to spot and put together a blistering you know, Van here where you know, phasing where you do left, right, champ day and then a Chet. So Leo van him. And I mean, the thing was, you know, there's like, the old Panasonic spots where your hair is fine. And probably not very cozy, but I stuck it on the end of stuff when I sent it to Warner Brothers 3300 Warner bit of art in Burbank. And they called and it was like, I'm going oh, God, like, there's my career. It's getting smaller and smaller. You know, I'm thinking, Oh, my God, I'm so excited. Man, we loved it. And I had Warner Brothers as a really good client for probably 20 well up until AOL bought them out, which was, you know, but I had them 2024. And they to the point where they go, you know, Madonna's in town, we need an interview. Here's the bio, she'll show up at three. And it was like, Really, so I've got some amazing In fact, I've got this collection of stuff that I'm at some point gonna work out something with, you know, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame that because it's one out, I mean, it's like Brian Wilson and REM. And yet all of these huge acts from back then. And I've got the original voice tracks the original interview that nobody else has him because it's the uncut version of all this stuff. But yeah, was that and doing contract spots, and they have a thing they do every month called the the guide, which was all their new releases. And at that time, it was not just Warner records. It was Warner Brothers, but they also distributed Kevin sire quest, Paisley Park, you know, metal blade, all these others. So all of those were all combined. So it was yeah, it was really an amazing ride. And in the first voice gig, someone had said, Well, there's they're having general auditions at Hanna Barbera. I mean, I've done a lot of voc. I don't think I'd ever auditioned for anything. It was like, Oh, okay. And so when I wrote this script, and I think they thought I was on crack. Because it was, you know, now we'll have to find the great note of stuff. He may call me. Great, great. Yeah. So I get you know, and it's like, jumping or doing a Robin Williams thing you could tell they were like, you know, in Gordon Hunt was the director, you know, Helen hunts guide. And a lot of the big directors now they Are were Gordon's assistants at one time there. And so that was my first and they said, you know, you get yourself an agent will have yell at her work and was like really? Wow. And so I had made wonderful friends with Don Pitts, who is like this iconic Holly. He was like the voiceover agent in Hollywood. His clients were Mel Blanc, Casey Casey and Gary Owens, Orson Welles. I mean, it was like, if you're tuned for a I mean, you name it, if you were, you know, he was the guy. We became very good friends. When I was doing stuff at the studio. Because I was doing, I started doing demos for his clients. And I called him up and he said, Get down your hog. We'll sign the paperwork today. And it was a Wow, really. So that was kind of that's kind of how things started. Mm hmm.

Toby Ricketts

Very interesting. And it kind of cements for me because I know, you know, like most voiceover careers, you hear about, at least the sort of ones with longevity are based on just consistency. Like I've been in the industry for 10 years, it started really tiny, was kept being really tiny for the first five years. And then suddenly, it just gets bigger and bigger. And success leads to success. And you meet people and you know, people and it just all suddenly catches on fire. And versus the people who were discovered in Walmart or something, and they do, you know, they're the new voice of Disney or something. And it was just like, it's their first gig, which is very uncommon, like, it's that's basically playing the lottery.

Marc Graue

Yeah, that doesn't help. It's the same thing with getting an agent. That doesn't happen a lot now, because the field is kind of flooded with so many people. So there's ways to approach that. It's like I always say it's like embellishing on a resume. Do you want to lie? Of course not. Because you're getting Oh, well, yes, I'm the voice of Ford, Chevy and Fox and NBC. It's like, really? Okay, I mentioned Budweiser. It's like, you know, and I've seen people do that. I've actually was at a party. This happened a couple of times, and people go, Well, yes. Because I'm the lead. And it was like, No, oh, yes. I and it was like, little miliar not because we recorded that, and you're not, you know, it was? Well, I mean, I was involved with the scratch tracks, you know, and it's it's just to be true to thine own self. It's very interesting in that sometimes it's not supportive. You know, my dad, who was a newsman verions, he was like, what you sit in a room and talk and they pay like kind of shits out, guys, but he had pipe dreams, you have smoke too much pot, but that was wrong. But you know, I didn't you know, it was like, you know, that that's unheard of. But it's just, you know, if you just, you know, follow that dream, it can be interesting thing, is it a lot of people expect that overnight sensation thing and think well, I mean, I, you know, I put my demo together myself and send it out. And I haven't heard anything. And it's like, well, it does, you know, even with a demo, it's a one off, grab attention. You know, I always use the other tip of the song Happy by for you know, it's like, if you're that song comes on, it'll be in your ears forever. Even if you hate this song. It's like, there it is your legs moving and it'll grab you. That's what you need to do in with a demo, be memorable, do something where they go holy, come here, come here, you got to hear this, you know, and that could be you know, comedy drama. So it's not just you know, here I am doing my voices. You know, and you know, I do a dad on Homer Simpson, DOH. Doh. It's like, well, let's see, there's a couple of things here. That's not dead on. Dan's not going anywhere. So why?

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. And speaking of that, one of my next questions was, like, there are lots of people, especially from the sort of computer game player world who are told they have great voices. And, and they do do like, you know, great impressions at parties. They're an absolute hoot. But there's a difference between being good at parties and being a professional voiceover actor, although it doesn't seem like it on the face. So what is the sort of key difference between having a great party voices and turning them into like professional voices?

Marc Graue

The main key honestly, is that when you do a party voice, there's three lines that you do and you nail those and it sounds exactly like the character. If I go there to go, here's the script. You mean in that voice? Then we're gonna start doing that now you're gonna find it's going to be a little more difficult to do. There are certainly things you know voice matching is very good, big movies. That is a huge huge business for people that really do dead on carriage ALPA chinos you know contract make you know call how many million dollars to do that thing but if to come back in and do ADR either reply says I don't want to do it or it's an extra $5 million and they can pay you know a stand up comedian who does a dead on ALPA Chino and is asked to come in and do it and you know, work for you know, a grand two grand for the day, you know, and knock it out of them and you would never know that that's who that was that was in there and so that that kind of stuff is great. But with with that sort of thing, too. You need to be brutally honest here. So but and also realize, you know, like, Okay, who are you voicing? I mean, did you know it's like, is that person going anywhere? I mean why? So why? I It's a great thing to have in your cache of voices, you know, but putting that on, I mean, it's like, does that mean? I mean, why? It's, it's kind of a moot point, if the person's already doing that voice, it's not like they're gonna, what did you hear the guy do that product, let's fire the guy that's done it for 10 years, we're gonna, you know,

Toby Ricketts

it's, it's kind of, it's kind of realizing that they said, like, trying to reverse engineer the commercial imperative of like, why are you doing these voices? Who will pay for these voices? And why? Like, you know, it has to be a great original voice or, or, like you say, you know,

Marc Graue

that's really above and beyond, that's what they're paying you to do is to bring, you know, every everybody has the same words. So why am I gonna hire you? You know, show me why, you know that. And that's where all the subtleties and there's only one you. So you need to bring that that bring you to that audition process, where it's like, oh, this is kind of a different take. You know, and that's what I was saying before, as far as play a little bit. You know, play a little sometimes if you carry something. I've done auditions and booked the job and go, God, we got your ideas, and geez, which I mean, it was so pumped up twisted was like, Gee, you sounded like a, you know, a total, you know, mass murderer was like, Well, great. I'm here you hired? You know, and it's like, well, maybe we'll have to pull it back a bit. That's good.

Toby Ricketts

You know? Yeah, exactly. Yeah, showing that you can go the distance, you know, is a really important thing. And one of the other things I want to talk about is that, like, you know, what separates really good actors, from from sort of novice talent say, is their ability to really commit to a roll, like more than 100% Like you hear people trying to do voices where you can hear that they're kind of, they're doing a voice. They're pretending to be a voiceover artist. They're not actually living that character. So how does one like start to from starting to do voices Gulf to and being voices?

Marc Graue

Well, first off, visually, picture in your head. What what is this guy? Is he is he fat? Is he going to be Roatan? So he has a guy, you know, like, it's down in here, or take anything up in this thing? When he's a little, we

Unknown Speaker

usually say what do you think? Yeah, you know, that's easy, you know, kind of thing. It could, you

Marc Graue

know, whether it's, you know, but but think in terms of, you know, a little eating outside of the box, I felt like Tony, let's all walk out a call, you know, it's just, you know, it's like a witch boys, if you ask a girl to do a wish to immediately she's gonna go out and get you my pretty and your dog fit. You know, it's like, well, why couldn't she be a 400 pound witch with a list and an English accent. You know, that just and I mean, sometimes, you know, copy can get very specific, but feel free on that. Like, if you're doing a second take, give them something that's, that's very, very different. The interesting thing is a lot of people when you're doing two takes, one is going to be loud, and one is going to be quiet. And it's like, and the problem is that we all have we, we all have our own personal natural style of reading out loud. And so change. I always tell people change your inflection change, like put the emphasis on a different set of words when you get locked in now that's going to change that up and make it sound very different. Rather than Oh, he sounded loud, he sounded soft, you know, but understand that that audition process they don't know till they hear it, you know, when it's like wow, this this is and there's certain things that just you know, the sky's but a great example it you know, is there a motor come of luck absolutely, positively. Night at the Museum. Brad Garrett originally did the big Tiki head, right that the Eastern event it was at yum, yum. And so he didn't want to do the ADR. So I got to get doing the ADR, which was great. And I got video game that was great. The ridiculous thing was Hershey's and McDonald's where it just they don't you like grabs this thing throws it and I go, yo, yo. That's it. You know, at that time, we still with William Morris, and even to the point where they call and say we'll look Hershey's wants to use it as a rollover on your website. Yum, yum, yum. You know, it was but they don't want to do another session. You know, they're asking you know, if they could just do a buyout for 15 minutes like oh, wait, I just sold out for lunch for about it's like seriously so occasionally those do come in where it's it's a ridiculous amount of money and things fly and you know, you have those big but the real reality is no journeymen voiceover person. You're doing a little of this a little without this out, you know, my thing is pretty much carry so a lot of video game stuff. animation, video game stuff is huge. Right now, it's massive, captive audience. So but like dialects are very real. And it's not like really look without its lucky tolerances. There's big yellow balloons and whatever the hell it was brown things are not putting, you know, it's, you know, it's you want it to be more realistic than that, you know, these are pretty, you know, their triple A's are pretty gritty. You know,

Toby Ricketts

I want to talk about the difference between what the key considerations are between sort of like games and cartoons, which is, you know, the stuff that you're famous for. So starting with games It's like, what's what is the state of Gambia it's gone. You know, we used to just say computer games knew what it meant. Now you've got triple A's, you got casual games, you've got mobile games. I mean, it's a huge, it's more diverse in the movie industry and bigger than the movie industry. So like, what would you say the status of a game? Not only

Marc Graue

bigger than the movie industry as as of this year? Right now, it's twice with the movie industry and sports industry combined. Wow. That's incredible. It's, it's, you know, a captive audience, you

Toby Ricketts

know, especially Gen COVID.

Marc Graue

Oh, yeah, they came out with a new Playstation five and the new Xbox. And then of course, they had problems with it. But I had a pipeline of like old Zealand games were sitting, you'd never need to play them on. So it's like, well, or not? Are you in? I can't really talk about that right this minute.

Toby Ricketts

And you do have to, do you think it's important to play games as a voice actor to see what everyone else is doing? And see what's expected?

Marc Graue

You know, I've had I've had a lot of people see that I've seen stuff on the internet with, you know, I, you know, clients? Well, I've had so and so told me that. I mean, you really can't, you know, be you know, voice games unless you've played them. And it's like, Well, I'm a great example. I'm too old, my fingers are too fat. You have a director that's telling, and they'll give you a full backstory. And it's no, it's exactly the same as as, you know, an on camera session or whatever, except they're giving you this is what's happening. In this case, they're running up, you're trying to, you know, keep these people at bay or you just, you're we really want to motion you're actually walking up and realizing that your village the village is burned down. Your family is dead, you know, and that's where that emotion waiter will lead up. You know, it's Yeah, I mean, it's pretty serious. You know, war cries full volume. I mean, these are the the cinematics are so real. It's crazy, huh. That's, that's, I think, probably of all the genres of yoga. Video games, so probably requires the most out of teacher because they really, that emotion is huge.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly. Yeah. And there's always that disconnect between them. You know, if you do, like, I think students are always really surprised at how much more you have to give this side of the mic then comes out the other side, like through a video game or through it through to like, you have to give so much more when you see the sessions for like Spongebob Squarepants is that people can't believe that people are like, a kind of like, veins popping because there's so much effort going on. Oh, how do you remind yourself that that's the amount of effort do you just sort of set a standard for yourself and you just like, absolutely throw everything you've got there?

Marc Graue

Well, it depends on what it is. You know, it depends on what kind of a character you're playing. I mean, you know, I've done a bazillion orcs, you know, all going all the way back to the first very first word crab all the way up through the Warcraft movie. You know, all the different versions of it. I don't think I've done I don't know eight or 10 or something. And so you know but an orc you know, he still wants to come home he said so there's still a I don't want to say humaneness but there's still emotions there. You know, we were laughing the other day though. Even dialect wise it goes when When did all trolls become cockney or? Face? You know, it's like, like anybody from the Bronx will see this face. They know they've all got that very raw, you know? And you can you know, definitely we when we did the Warcraft movie, everybody was like Yeah, that's great. See you Monday we'll throw reference going on there.

Toby Ricketts

And how does that work? Because I've always struggled with I've wanted to sort of just dip my toe into video games see if it's something because it because you know, I'm mainly sort of in the commercial sort of corporate space and it does get a bit sort of like same time and I'd like like to mix it up and do and it's fun characterizing

Marc Graue

you know, baby mom I'm dipping my toe

Toby Ricketts

but like I struggled with that with with like the screams exertion scripts for example they they're quite hard on your voice like how do you what are your some of your tips in terms of staying healthy and keeping your instrument in one piece?

Marc Graue

Well, I think I've been doing it for so long you don't really even think about it. But I'm honestly I've had sessions where I came up via the only thing honestly above and beyond every Shut up you just need to not talk for a couple of days which microbrand seems to think is wonderful. I don't know why that is you know all the things with you know honey throat code, you know limit to always that's fine I'll dry you know Ghazal throat coat what I'm doing a session like that. But you just you know it you just need to rest. And you know, there are certain things you know, even efforts virtually all characters have efforts if it's like you're being attacked, air is going out. And they'll go you know, give me a set of five you've been hit give me a set of five you've been stabbed, give me a five you know, you've been a sword and attacking is usually a two part what you're picking up. Yeah, you know, and that kind of, you know, feel to it. And there's tricks with that to you know, as far as efforts and stuff but usually a good draft We'll keep that till the end. You know, you're at the end of this session, and kind of let you know. And sometimes, you know, it's hard. I mean, it's got to be honest with you. Because half the time Honestly, even more than it, I really don't know what I do is like, Okay, I booked this character. And it's like, okay, great. And so we do it and go, Okay, that was it. Let's do the average grade, do it. And I'm thinking, Oh, right. Oh, here, we've got one another character here real quick. It's like, Ah, okay. And even even two is you can have you do three characters and then only pay with usually, then you've got one mean, and the other two are incidental. And they're usually very good about it. It's not like they're mean are terrible, you know, but it's some sessions can be very, very grueling. In that video game, guys, they pray, you know, if, like, when you've worked with them a while and stuff, be prepared. Video games are usually an ABC of each line, meaning you're doing three different takes. So you don't want to go and it's great. And it's great. And it's great. That's not really helpful. So you want to make sure you switch that up, because different intent. That's not if they've worked with you a while and stuff you'd like with now, they'll usually let me get get away doing a full page of stuff and going through, and then I'll go back and have to do pickups, you know, if some, or they'll just go, Yep, let's move on. You know, it just depends on whatever they they want. But just you know, it's kind of be prepared for whatever, whatever comes your way. And sessions can be, you know, the interesting thing with video games is a lot of the time, the casting process may only be four or five lines. And if you book the game, it may be 22 pages of dialogue, you know, so it's a very different kind of a feel. And so it's just, you know, it's, it's really not, you know, it's not brain surgery, if it was IP and a lot of trouble. You know, so it's really just kind of, you know, but thinking in terms to have what they have, there's some people that don't have that thought process that we call it American Idol syndrome, or it's a no, no, just bring it down like this. I am no, bring it down like this. I am and it's like, okay. And it's just it's not going to happen. I've got a great show we did with a, we were doing spots for Captain Morgan raw. And the line is Captain Morgan, what do you say? That's it? Captain Morgan, what do you say? The guy keeps going? Captain Morgan, what do you say? It's like? No, it's Eddie. Eddie. Wasn't here. A good? No, no, man. It's just a throwaway. Why do you say why do you say? No, we're not asking a question. It's just like Captain Morgan. Why do you say, got it? Captain Morgan. Why did you say it's like, no, you're doing No, no.

Toby Ricketts

Actually, I've had that experience, you know, like, in terms of mentoring and stuff, and just come to the conclusion that like, voiceover really is more about listening than doing like, it's listening to yourself. And it's listening to others and what others are sort of asking you to do and making sure you're doing

Marc Graue

networks to the interpretation of what they're telling, oh, nudge, you know, and that's why when you do this, we're like doing three in a row. I mean, it's like, but I always pride myself on, you know, they book me for three hours, and I've done in an hour in 10 minutes, you know, because I'm usually pretty fast and can zip through stuff pretty well. You know, did you not like, Oh, it's just, you know, you kind of been like anything else? Again, muscle memory, you just you know where to go? You've done a zillion I'm gonna say, Okay, sure. No problem.

Toby Ricketts

I think it's easy to forget as Mossad is that we, the we, like, part of the skill is knowing what we sound like when we do certain voices, like we know exactly what sound like as opposed to like normal population, who, when they hear themselves go, Oh, my God don't sound like that. You know, like, there's that disconnect. Whereas, like, the the point of being a voiceover is being a sounding board, nothing all these ideas, but knowing exactly what we to those sound like and being able to modify

Marc Graue

them. It's true, you know, to that point, I mean, again, a lot of the time, I don't, many times I don't listen to the finished. I had a series for 11 Siri or 11 seasons on NatGeo, calling Alaska State Troopers and generating it. And I don't consider myself an overwhelmingly great narrator. You guys do a lot of characters. So it was a great, I mean, obviously, 11th season, that's a great run. I think the best comment was at a family gathering and somebody, my daughter was there, they said, that must be really cool to hear your dad on TV. And she goes, No, because every time I hear that voice, I think I'm in trouble. I want to hear this done.

Toby Ricketts

Again, it's so funny. How about that I heard I heard a clip of that, that that documentary when I was researching this and, and it is it's almost a character that kind of, you know, that kind of police documentary. It's like, you know,

Marc Graue

these guys don't get away from the cops. And that's what they want it Yeah, yeah, that's, that's, and that's the key is that it's not, I've had people, you know, look at, well, this copy is just stupid. I'm gonna cheat and it's like, this is that's not how it works. You know, you're gonna get copied. It's like, really? Okay. I mean, it's like, you know, you can, you know, make it at least so that it's made because a lot of time it'd be maybe was written by someone who doesn't be English is not their first language. So you may be able to clean things up a little bit, you know, a great example of that, which which is prime for that is anytime you're doing localization, or ADR for like a foreign film and doing dubbing into America, you're constantly having to change stuff to make it fit lip flap, you know, are gonna fit, you're gonna have to add an hander or, you know, if that's looking closely to it, and that that's a constantly changing kind of

Toby Ricketts

thing. And I mean, Netflix is really and the others are doing it, too. But like they've changed the localization game and that they change everything into every language basically, to just you know, give it complete worldwide reach. And they say

Marc Graue

okay, nothing

Toby Ricketts

but it's kind of a special skill, isn't it? Like and do you have the facilities at your studio to sort of you know, do the the impersonator Yeah, watching the lips recording?

Marc Graue

Oh, yeah. We've got the ADR stage. Yeah, it's got a big 15 by 15 foot screen with a yeah, we've got banners and they've come across, it'll go into lock so it'll go beep beep and you know, when to Tyrion, playback production audio. Yeah, we've done a ton of I mean, even I think probably the coolest it was we were worked on a what was it at the sea? With Ron Howard movie, they said, Hang on, he was at Pinewood he was the director. Jelena was wrong. It was like, Oh, cool. Yeah, that was kind of neat. Yeah, we do a lot of that. And we always laugh if it's a particularly bad Christmas movie, and it's on Hallmark. Let's see, hold on to any of those Shannon's got Billy Ray Cyrus, chances are we probably did the ADR saying,

Toby Ricketts

I found it an interesting fact that like overseas, like the big American stars have their own ADR voice, which always voices for that, that character disease, you know, that's kind of a thing, which

Marc Graue

it's finally starting to open up. Because one of the things that really bothered me a lot, I've got a bunch of, you know, obviously I live in LA. So I've got a ton of Hispanic friends, Latino guys that I grew up with. And it was really bothers me that they'd have first run shows like, you know, CSI or something that's making millions and they do it, you know, the Spanish version for Telemundo. And guy, by the way, you know, we'll pay him 100 bucks or something. It was like what, and this is like, the voice of this mega series, you know, through the entirety, like how many ever episodes I think that we're finally starting to realize, you know, big market for us should be paying these guys because they're good. They're phenomenal at what they do. Absolutely.

Toby Ricketts

Absolutely. Yeah. So switching tech a bit like where do you? Where do you source jobs? And would you suggest people source jobs because now like, there's a whole diversity of different ways to get jobs now online, mainly, that it's the pay to play sites, there's agents, there's just having contacts, like, you know, how has that changed over the years? And what do you say is the most you know, where can people find work these days?

Marc Graue

Well, I found that public bathrooms it scale. Alright, I don't have to like it. Right. Okay. Sorry.

I apologize. Um, it really, it depends on your skill set. As far as what kind of stuff you want to be looking for you there will be you'll see tons of stuff on the internet about you don't need an agent about it. And it's like, well, that's because you don't have one. It's like, why would you not want someone in your corner whose only only job is to get your work and they don't get paid? Unless they're getting you work? I mean, that's you know, and a good agent has contacts it's like and there's there's agents that are more connected in specific areas. I mean, if you want to do video games, you want to find somebody who's in bed with Brian Scotland and dead with Insomniac Games and a bed with you know you know, Blizzard and all the you know, same thing with you know, if the you know, the animation and you want to do that that make sure that they've got those contacts, you know, portion. Scott over coast to coast is brave, you know, why don't you whether it be outlets, I mean, all these guys cabaret, she's leaving CSD, but you know, I mean, there's a bunch that are real, and they have those connections, they build those connections over years. So if, let's say so and so it you know, Disney is doing a dub got to they're going to go to which means you're going to audition for it, you know. And that's the that's the bigger jobs. Which brings us to an interesting thing to Union. In the States, obviously, the governing Union, where it used to be too little vitals stuff anyway, it was, you know, it was American Federation, television, radio artists and Screen Actors Guild now they've combined definitely opens the door to better paying jobs. There's residuals, there's that kind of stuff. However, what's happened at this point, seriously, if to be very honest, it's probably about 8020, about 80%, non union work and 20% Union. And that's changed dramatically. And quite honestly, the union should have jumped on that a long time ago, rather than it kind of treated the voiceover thing. It's kind of a vouchered redheaded child like a delta. And now they're going Oh, I see that little tiny speck. That's the boat that sailed, you know, So, you know, hopefully they'll they'll catch up and you know, but it's, it's a cross. There's the Taft Hartley Act which can get you into the Union if it's just the you know, that's a whole nother Bucky but

Toby Ricketts

yeah, it's pretty, it's quite complex, but people on the outside I mean, I know I've definitely I mean, I've been tapped out laid onto a few things. And yeah, boy, when you get a taste of Veta, sweet, sweet nectar of the Union, it's hard to have to stop. But, you know, it's hard for people to get that first for Giga seafood outside the states because you then kind of have to either commit fully or not, and, you know, becomes a very confusing mess. And the biggest thing

Marc Graue

without if you're outside of the states or outside, you know, if you're, you know, Mid America, make sure that connectivity, you've got that, and you know how that system works. You know, ipdtl stuff works pretty well. But source Connect is kind of its source Connect is like Pro Tools. They came. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, everybody had. And if you do that opens the door, you don't have to be. I'll give you a great example, that Raina in the drag the Disney movie that was all done at people's homes because of COVID. And for Disney to do that is unheard of. And a lot of the time companies will even send out a rig, you know, they'll actually do which I've never really understood the printing side. Because if you have a crappy space, it's it'll reproduce that crappy and as long as you know, you know, but But sure, so that recording in the home I mean, it's become a much more where it used to be. It was like, you know, two or three you know, Don I mean, I LaFontaine I knew Don we used to do all those crappy Steven Seagal movies back in the 80s. You know? And it's, it's just, you know, I mean, Don Aveeno, home studio, Danny, dark boys of NBC. I mean, you know, those were like, Oh, my God, you have a home studio. Jeez, really. And at that time, the whole reason Don had a limo was not because he was dead, is because it wasn't ISDN there wasn't, you know, so we had to actually go from session to session to session to session to session and in Los Angeles, that can very well very quickly, you know, so that was really the main reason. But, you know, it's that connectivity thing will open the doors to everywhere, you know,

Toby Ricketts

they will exactly and it is just a sign of just how things have changed and and how it's democratized in some respects like it like for me than the old New Zealand Yeah, being able to get these these gigs in the states boot with with just no work and and just hanging in there for a long time. Yeah, but it's, it has kind of opened the door. It's fantastic. I really were run with fostering at a time. And we've we've, we've covered,

Unknown Speaker

let's talk really fast.

Toby Ricketts

So I guess actually, one of the things that came off the back of the games thing was, have they started taking casting and recording in house? Are these because they're such big games? They require so much recording? Do they still outsource?

Marc Graue

As far as the studio itself?

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, like, like the outsourcing the recording and the casting to agents and stuff? Or do they seem to maintain their own books,

Marc Graue

it's still sure they'll, they'll still, it's the bigger companies, they pretty much know who the players are and what they do. But yeah, they'll they'll still, there's studios that they feel comfortable working at, and that so then they know the engineer, they know, the and they know the quad, so you have a report, just like you would with anybody else. It's like you've got this this group that's recording, so your writer is in their directors in there, you have your engineer in there, you know, what the place is, like, what the food's gonna be, like, what the data, how the day is gonna go, how the tracks will sound, all of that stuff. So there's that portion of it, although occasionally, they will actually bring, you know, Blizzard still has a big facility down in, you know, down in Orange County, and I went down there recently to do a thing that's coming out later, but so you have that kind of stuff. As far as casting, yeah, but they don't, they'll outsource from a standpoint that sometimes they'll throw a wide net, just to see and the interesting thing is now that net is even wider, because of what we were talking about earlier, they want various if they want, you know, northern Asian, we want somebody that's that's Czechoslovakia, they want somebody that's Czech, that's it speaks Czechoslovakia that may have an accent that debit it sounds very real. There used to be a guy in town here that did de Burgh, Middleton Berg would get ADR for films, and he had this ridiculous list of stuff where you know, he'd do his Sylvester Stallone film, and it would be like, Okay, well, this next scene, they're in Pakistan and he go, what province and they go it's data and he'd have three guys would come in and do the huddling in it. So you're watching and so even even somebody from pet would go God they're there you know, even though they're on a backlot, you know, similar so it sounds weird, but games are even evolving to that where they are looking depending on what it is, you know, but a lot of realism so you know, those two put a call out to you know, you'll you'll get stuff from your agent, you know, going here this isn't new for this and that kind of thing. And then they know kind of what the you know, the big directors of video gives a credit they're pretty aware of who does what you know, and tell me they kind of know what not to say there's not new but they kind of know you know, this person nails that this person nails had a record or group of people.

Toby Ricketts

And again, on the realism thing with games like that does seem to be a real, a real trend is that people are going for this really dramatic sort of realism. But it's, I mean, how do you, like teach people to be realistic? Like, what what are some tips to because as soon as you put normal people in front of microphone, they sound like a scared rabbit. So like,

Marc Graue

biggest thing of all, it's emotion, you know. And so think think of it, I'll give you a great example. And this is not not a fun example, it's, I have coached Special Needs soccer teams for years, right? That's been my thing away from voiceover and just, it's very sweet and very endearing. About three months ago, I got a call from a mob. Daniel, who's now 22nd died from COVID. And which was just like, in two days later husband died. Now that's like, I mean, see even your facial expression that just connected emotionally, it's like, wow, so if you bring that up, and you have that, in my, in my head, when I'm doing something emotional, I guarantee you somebody listening is going to be going, Holy shit. This is like, crazy, intense, you know. And that's, and that's when you've connected. I always use the analogy of it's like walking down the street, and you see a little girl sitting on the side of the road, she's crying, we're not going to walk by and go, you know, what the hell is your butt? No, you'll get down to her level, your facial expression changes your eyes connect your vocal pattern changes, because you're connecting with that person emotional. And that's, that's the key. And if you do that, man you're in. I mean, there's no that because then it's very real. And it's very raw, and all of that. It's like, it's right there. You know, and you can't, you can't and that's not it, it's just putting you in that in that mode. You know, and and really, really going knows animation. It depends anime, you know, you've got two schools of thought on that you've got the cute and remember, don't judge Mr. Squirrel by his tail, you know, kind of thing. And it's very sweet and endearing. Then you've got Adult Swim, which is like, Did you see the tail on abroad? Oh, a shit. I mean, it's like, you know, they're, they're all over the place. So it's really just be prepared for whatever comes your way. You know, that's, that's the key, but whatever you do, just make sure you excel in. I always use that phrase, just be memorable. You know? And that's sometimes hard to do. But you could emotion I mean, if you see an adult or hear an adult crying, or even wait, I mean, man that affects you, that that you don't just go to I mean, you're like, even if you don't know the person, you okay? And what's going on? You know, and you're, you know, I'm writing it's like, it's gonna put me in tears to me, what do you okay? What's gonna, you know, and that's, that's that human part. And if you connect with that dam you're in. There's no doubt about it.

Toby Ricketts

I've had such good advice. Just before we go. One of my favorite films in a world that was in your studios, right. I love that was shot there. Yeah. What was that like to be involved with?

Marc Graue

It was awful. No, okay. No, it was wonderful lake I I was very lucky that I had known Lake beforehand because she'd come in and do to do stuff and so so I was probably the only was it I didn't have to audition or anything or to beat you know, we were I think SIP dead and Mark Elliott and everybody. And, you know, that's a Fred's a good friend, Bella Meadow was in there, too. That's, you know that with the Plater dad. It was great. It was really quiet. You know, the only thing it always ends with any issue. I mean, that was phenomenal. Great, you know, cows to show you. Lake was amazing. I mean, she put that thing together on a shoestring one, all kinds of right. Her career has just taken off. She's directing. And I mean, she's doing all kinds of stuff. But there were those moments, you know, where I, you know, go okay, you know, I know I've got okay, I said, Guys, we can do this, but hallway is fine, but we can't use Studio A today. I've got sessions, and then I walk Epico there's the fucking door. We had to take it out. You can't take the door off. It's a studio. But you know what I'm thinking going. We've got a session in 10 minutes, put the door on, you know. So there was some of that, you know, but overall, it was it was it was really, really, I mean, they were very thoughtful when it was a great, great cast. It was it was one of those those kinds of things, but we also did a series or BH one called Free Radio. You should look that up sometime. It's very fun. Okay. That's good.

Toby Ricketts

I thoroughly recommend to it. Yeah, we'll love you as if you haven't seen in a world. It's like the number one film about voiceover for voiceovers. It's It's classic. It's very nice.

Marc Graue

It's got a heart to it. Yeah, absolutely.

Toby Ricketts

It's it's a very nice way or anything. Well, we found we've reached our time. Thank you so much for joining me today. Um, I wanted to say as well you offer coaching on VoiceOver and a broad range of things. What's the best way for people to get in touch?

Marc Graue

Um, you can reach me out to www Oh god, that's novelistic. Just do lowercase Mark Ma, RC dash, grouchy R e u e calm so it's my dash browser.com that email from that goes directly to me It bypasses the studio so it doesn't get lost in that way and I'm pretty good about getting back you know immediately but yeah, it's me RC dash g or UE don't try to pronounce your last name. It's pronounced. Yeah. Obviously, my parents didn't believe in so

Toby Ricketts

you have all the vowels all the vowels! Well, thank you so much for joining me today and I really look forward to watching the ceremony. So that's this year, which I can't be there in person because of the whole COVID thing.

Marc Graue

But yeah, I It's funny when they called it said you know her life it was like he should have got the right number. Okay, it's you know, and I'm flattered I just I think I think at this point, it's because it's because I'm old and still alive. So I want I'm still here. My pants are squishy again. Anyway. You got it man - thanks for having me!

The Queen of Character Voices - Lani Minella

Ever since I saw Lani Minella's Character Monologue on her YouTube channel I was amazed at how one mouth could become so many different people! Lani Runs AudioGodz - a voice production company specialising in casting and directing character voices. Lani herself has brought to life many thousands of characters in animations and videos games in a voice artist career spanning nearly 3 decades!

Join Toby Ricketts in a wide ranging interview with Lani covering many topics including: Casting vs Directing vs Voicing
Where your voices come from
Where did she get her start
Gaining confidence and knowing the trade
losing yourself in the character
Playing 'The Clickers' from The Last Of Us 2
How to come up with different character voices
How she uses accents in her characters
Managing the ethics of accents in 2021
The most underrated accent
How she comes up with alien noises
The challenges of creating accents and characters in voice sessions
Using real kids vs female voice artists
Serendipity in getting voice jobs
The story of the voice of Spongebob Squarepants
How to approach emotes and exertion scripts
How to make sounds authentic
Making death noises
Talking in pain
Vocal health and wellbeing

Contains clips of: The Last of Us 2 - Clickers Tiamat boss scene from Darksiders Avatar at Disney World promo from Disney Find more about Lani Minella from www.laniminella.com or www.audiogodz.com

Transcript:

welcome to the vo life and gravy for the brain Oceania podcast, it is my spectacular privilege to introduce my next guest on VO life today. I've followed this lady for many years, I run a voice Academy and I always make a point to show this particular video to my students, which is her going through like a monologue or kind of a routine of all her different character voices. And I've always wanted to be in touch and ask her about the craft. And finally, it's my opportunity. So it's my great pleasure to introduce Lani, Manila to the BLF podcast highlighting. Hi, how are you? Good to see you. I never knew that. That's the first time I've heard that. So thank you. So tell us just a little bit about your voice career. How long have you been in this business? Oh, since the dinosaurs, I've been probably I started in the game industry in 92. But I went through I mean, I'm ancient. So I did all that in kind of a radio business years before that. And so I started doing invitations on radio people heard that started saying, We need you to do ferngully movie voices and to pitch the LaserDisc way back then. And then they had someone downstairs doing CD ROMs I didn't even know what a CD Mama. And they said, Go downstairs and talk to our children's departmental. Okay. And I asked them who else does this? And that was the beginning. You know, so that's how it all got started with basically radio. And that was decades ago. Gosh, that's amazing. Um, you'd sent through like your, your kind of resume and I was looking at the front page and thinking, Wow, that's pretty impressive. And then I realized with 13 more pages of video, like literally scrolling, as you know, like, more quantity than quality. I tried to print as much as I can because IMDb doesn't? Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, it struggles with the video game section, doesn't it? So you you are like primarily a voice talent. But you also do casting in your direction and session? Is that right? Right? Definitely. what's your favorite? Is your favorite to do the voiceover stuff? Or do you enjoy all three? I enjoy all three. And the main thing is I I still would say that coming up, if I'm doing voices, the most exciting thing is to come up and construct new things, new alien languages, new things that I know expect. For example, when I was called to do the monster voices for it, chapter two, I had no idea what I was up there for showing up on the Warner Brothers live. It's intimidating enough trying to know where you're going and get passes and doing all that stuff. And then to be shown, okay, here's what we're doing. And we want you to watch the little line going across and go. Okay, that I think is really nice. And that's the fun part is when you get a challenge like that and can make up things on your own. But directing is fine, too. I really enjoy working with people and casting, I think you've had other people that you've interviewed before, is a it's an interesting thing. But when I do casting, I tend to not make people audition. I don't generally go through agents, because it's always last minute. Here's the stuff we need it in two days from now. So I just kind of I don't typecast people, but I will kind of assign and that's what makes it a challenge to a lot of boys challenge because we have to come up with with this on the fly in the session and be able to, you know, act. Absolutely. So when was the first time that you were that you discovered that you had this sort of knack for being able to just come up with you know, voices that were not your own? Probably ever since I was a little kid and had no friends. I would make fun of teachers in school and imitate them and get in trouble and be the class clown to make people laugh. So that would be my approval. You know what I mean? So the N telling jokes and things of that nature. So probably from the time I was a little kid, I just was imitating things that I would see on TV. And luckily I'd be by myself so I wouldn't embarrass myself enough. And it's one thing to be the sort of the person at the party with with all the voice tricks. But I mean, I've discovered as a coach, like you get a lot of people that sort of come on courses and say, I'm great at doing voices but then you put them Find a mic or in a situation where it's like, No, I don't want that. But I want something slightly different and they kind of they can't deal with it. So it's a it's an entirely different skill set to be able to make that work for you commercially. When was the sort of When did you sort of When was the first time you're paid to be behind the mic doing this? guy she sent me remember that, Barbara? I think it would probably be. Hmm, I'm trying to remember. But it wouldn't have been games, it might have been in radio, you know, because I was at radio stations as well thing production and things of that nature. But you're absolutely right. Being on mic, people can freeze up. And even if you see some of the YouTube videos of the celebrities that are in Pixar or something doing their stuff, they're standing there with like a pencil. And we all know that in order to get action, you should move your whole body and do gestures and be big. And when you're taught to do on camera, what they say don't do that too much, Jim Carrey exaggeration, you're going to look really exaggerated, but it's just the opposite. So being on mic, like I said, Sometimes I've worked. I've auditioned for agents, and I would ask them, okay, where do I plug the mic? headphones? And they say, Oh, we were getting feedback earlier. And I'd say Why? Because mary matalin was in the studio, and she couldn't hear. Okay, door flies open. And they say it's a customer. This, I want mainly agency, not to put the headphones on the talent because sometimes it scares them to hear their voice in their ear. I'm not. Okay, you know, so this is a whole other field where I think people don't realize they all think it'll be fun. You've heard that before, I think it'd be fun to do voiceovers, I can do really like, do them all. Well, I can do this and that. And it is better than digging ditches, it's a lot more interesting. And it does bring out a lot more creativity. But you have to be in voice control. And that's the thing, you're controlling your voice enables you then when someone says like you said, Can you make a little older? Can you make it a little less accent? Can you pull it back, you know, you have to be able to adjust on the fly. And if you don't have the voice control, and we all never know what's going to exactly come out when somebody says can you do you know, just make up something, do it. And you don't know if they want to, let's say, Rosie Perez, you've never done Rosie Perez before. And you have to say, I don't know that she sound kind of like this, you know, I mean, whatever you have to be able to kind of not be embarrassed. And the trick to is that the more you move, the more people who are actually watching, you are impressed. That person knows what they're doing, instead of Santa looking all nervous in the fig leaf position or your hands in your pockets or, you know, things of that nature. So yeah, I think that being on the mic can intimidate some people. But that's part of being on voiceover. So not only do you have to be an engineer nowadays, because you have to record at home. But you also have to be able to bend with the wind. And oftentimes, if you have a bad director, the trick is if they say I'll know it, when I hear it, you just ask them the question, would you like it in a texture older boys? Then they still say they know and there? You just heard it. And so yeah, there's there's little fix, but to know the trade and know the terminology. You know, like you're saying, p pops, you got to know what that means. So I think it's all a matter of you have to be more than just a person that reads as you will know, and I'm sure you train people to is that when people say I've heard the coaching philosophy of just be yourself. When you have to be different characters in a game. I would say you should adjust as that self is that character. Not necessarily that you're being Lonnie doing an orc given me. If I want to do an AUC. I'm not acting like mice who acts like that, you know what I mean? myself. So I'm thinking that you can do that you can kind of add yourself but that whole philosophy of fine your motivation, your subtext and all that kind of stuff kind of can be modified a bit to say that you have to bring acting as though you're watching yourself on a screen on your forehead, and you're playing that role being that role, but being your quote unquote, self does not confuse you a little bit. Yeah, absolutely. Like I often see people who come in my courses that it's like, they they know the character they want to do. And inside they've committed maybe 50% because they're like, I don't want to go too far, because I'll look silly. And it's like, the that's the point of this game is to is to go beyond what anyone else will. Like that's when you get real successes. Like it's not by doing a voice but by becoming that voice that literally feeling like right inside that skin, which I'm sure you'd agree. Yeah, well, and plus in games, they don't write enough lines to give you just one part. You have to play multiple roles because they could bring back some repeat character from six years ago with two lines so they get banned up Getting all the little Bitsy parts that are leftover that might be new, you know, so you do have to be able to sound different. And still not. We don't expect a man to be Mickey Mouse and falsetto. You know, most women do teenage boy voices. But most games don't have a lot of kids unless you're doing it. Kids game, you know, that kind of deal. So when you're talking about role play games, and massive multiplayer, online role play games, those would be the more adult things. And for women especially, you don't really ever have parts that are written for like the Encino check can act like oh my god. It's usually heavy duty warriors, you know, so women are going to be a little bit masculine sometimes, or if they're going to be a fighter, you don't want someone thinking they're going to be destroyed on the first swipe. So your voice has to indicate a toughness. That's very true, isn't it? Yeah. And then games do tend towards like, I guess a kind of a more violent, or at least a very kind of gritty kind of nature like that, then it's not often it was towards darkness rather than light, right. And even the angels may not sound you know, like they're that angelic. Yeah, because everyone is always in a fight. You're always trying to beat somebody. And when you're having an boss, like in a blizzard game or something, I suppose you have a million people all on your screen, little icons, all throwing their spells and doing whatever it is at this monster. It's difficult to make out the speech is usually just a cacophony of things going out there. So when you have emotes where you're dying, and you're attacking or being attacked, what have you, it all becomes a big mess. It's not usually that distinguishable between that. And I think I love being an bosses, I think that's really a joy, especially though, you have to realize that, again, I when I was called to be the clicker, or Last of Us to and I was impacted on the first game and the clicker, they just said, Oh, by communicate by clicking go. And you were watching an avatar on screen of Oh, this monster running down, smacking against walls, doing all kinds of weird things going in agony and doing all this stuff? Well, there's two ways of clicking, you can let it out like a screen door. Or, like do this. Then when you're breathing in, you know, you can do that kind of a thing. But you never know what's gonna come out of your mouth. So just the whole ability of trying. And showing that you're willing to look like an idiot is, I think, very much appreciated in the industry. You know what I mean? And people who have a good attitude and don't say, Don't tell me how to say it. Don't give me a line read. That's kind of you were bringing up before, things that we directors don't really like to hear. I mean, it's fine. I just sometimes they're in such a hurry that I can't think of an analogy, like, okay, you're out in outer space and a birthday cake folks by and your line is what is that? And because I don't know why we're saying half the time. What is that? So I'll say Give it to me two ways, like, what is that? or What is that? Okay, next, you know, on with that, it would be really nice if we knew more about the games. But I, for one have never heard anything, I was asked once per gauntlet, they said you're going to be part of the whole process that never happened. So what I mean is that so we're looking cool. How important is it to sort of to know the genre and know games? Like, are you a video gamer? Do you play video games? Or do you rely on the directors to kind of show you what the context is? Ah, neither. I have to ask sometimes the people who are working with you that say on a Skype call or whatever, they don't even know. You ask them? Is this over battle noise? Is this in stealth mode? Do it both ways. So you have to make sure that you keep the loud stuff last, so you don't wreck somebody's voice. But oftentimes, the things that people that are getting a test, maybe the audio guys, not the producers, you know what I mean? So we're we're working with somebody that doesn't really know the game, maybe they know a little bit, but we're just working pretty much cold. And again, I have to give script writers the credit, because a terrible script is hard to make sound good no matter how good of a voice actor that you are. So I really am applauding of people that write good scripts. I remember when I was doing blood too. Long time ago. One of my favorite lines of this. I don't know what she was thinking she's kind of Jamaican huge warrior, and she says, I've got chunks of people like you in my stool. And I thought that was just hilarious. You know? It's been tested. Yeah, yeah, I know. But the point is when you get some fun stuff like that you have fun. And teamwork is really essential. So if everybody's on it, hey, let's do this, we're gonna have fun doing this, and, and we respect our talent. And, you know, nobody's trying to put anybody down and make anybody feel bad. I think it all turns out to be better. And if the teamwork is, is where people know what they're doing, it helps. But oftentimes, we're working cold. That's very true, isn't it? And I think it's important to have that playtime. Like where you're maybe not in a session, do you set aside a time to or I mean, I guess if we don't these days, but did you just start with? You lock yourself in a room and be like, I'm going to come up with 10 different voices or something like that. See yourself challenges? No, I have to say no. Because again, it's usually a surprise, when we get our auditions in the inbox, we never know what's going to be. And if it is for games, more likely, I'm called lately. I mean, I say now in my career, I'm called up, let's say, by Blizzard, I don't know for what I'll show up, and they'll Hand me the script. Okay, we've got three different characters, sometimes you don't even see a picture. They're nice enough to pull a picture up when you're when you're in front of the mic. And you go, Oh, okay. Okay. You know, and so it's kind of a very spontaneous thing, which was why maybe as a good training, theater helps. Because you can project you can be bigger, you know what I mean? Then on screen, you can use gestures when you're doing theater, drama. And improv could be good. So you're quick on your feet, those two things might very much help or enough, what what kind of talk in terms of coming up with different voices and being able to sort of, you know, carry that direction? What are some of the levers that you can pull, because I know with my, my voice, you know, I've got the deeper register down here, and I've got my normal talking voice. And then I've got kind of a higher voice up here as well. And things like making those sound natural, but then there's also like their raggedy old tone, and then like young tones, I noticed that you've got lots of different levers that you can pull in terms of accent pitch, rasp, Enos, what are some of the things that we have to do, and this is when I'm coaching people, I will tell them, you've got your pitch or textures and your accent. I mean, that's the easiest way to of course, you got attitude and all that kind of stuff. But, you know, when you go to a kung fu class, you learn your kata, and I kind of made this up as a coaching link where you're going, you know, and you're hitting things, but you have been below your belly button. And if you want a deeper voice, by putting your lips forward, who you create more of a inverted chest, so you make yourself into a base metal. You know, Enzo, whoa, ha, ha, ha, ha. So it's, it's, it's formulating not only your body to cave in your chest to be deeper. But also, if you put your lips forward, it places the voice in the back of the throat, which is a great way to get a British accent by the way. For me in the morning, right? Yeah, that's how I tell people to do that to get into it. Because it's not it's not call me on the morning. Call me. Not that British people talk. Like that's a good way to get into it, you know? Exactly. So you've got that and then the texture stuff, is I tell people find sandpaper like Clint Eastwood or zombie? You do. You can start out with a loud whisper. I see dead people. Now add a little bit more. now. Go ahead, make my day then. I'll ask if I would ask you I'm gonna put you on the spot here. Okay, I want you to be a general think patent. Okay, patent or George C. Scott or a tough general with a gravelly I'm use that term, gravelly voice with a lot of rumbly texture. Okay. And I want you to say and bite your consonants, which means you know, you hit them hard. Get that mo over here now. Okay. Get that I'm over here now. Nice. Nice. Now I'd like you to try it. Have you ever played with trucks or gun? I'll try to grow like a dog. You have to flap your voice a little bit more make more air because your voices like a carburetor a mix of air and voice. So if you went and try Can you try her? Mo to me over now you got it. Let's see. You can also know that's great. Because you can lead into it you can go get that out even I mean you can lead in to do that kind of thing. And that gives you another voice you know that you could you could also do it. You know you could do all that kind of thing. So that's the different leavers as you call them, that you can do is to get the pitch. And now if you're cool, you can give them my accent. I had a funny story I told you that Wizards of the Coast THAT THAT DOES MAGIC and Neverwinter, which I do the casting for. never went to we were making the dwarves would be Scottish musket. ELLs are going to be British and the dwarves are going to be Scottish. And to help differentiate between all these races, and so that would give them a Scottish accent or whatever. You're ready to do. And then they came back say Scotland wasn't invented yet. It can't have Scottish accents. Right? Wait a minute, Britain was invented. But Scotland wasn't invented. I don't have my history that well, but it was one of those moments but yeah, so also, if you're doing accents or dialects, if you have a phrase that can get you into the right thing, it helps to learn either maybe some, maybe some of the language if it's a foreign language, you can, you know, almost die and getting you got a little bit more of that kind of a thing. But for Asian, I always use the most honorable pasa. So you put in phrases move on about, like three words. And the backup British drop their ers, like after over, under. It's the same way but you're not in the back of the throat. Hmm. So instead of saying I'd love the chance to die, I love that. turnstones ansata There we go. You can talk like British but you make phrase over under after, not over, under after? I think I mentioned when I searched earlier how when I ask people do you do British they'll say oh I do British accent. And inevitably a lot of men will pull off. You know, and or they think that Cockney and people who don't know where Cockney really originated from coffee. It's not what American Theatre is turned. What's our, you know, Mary Poppins? I know. It's actually a rhyming language like apples and pears means stairs, you know. So the point is that usually RP, Received Pronunciation. Patrick Stewart, drama Picard. That's the thing. But the mistake a lot of people think is that British always sound pompous and aloof. They don't you don't have to say no. So you just have to know a little bit more about that. And like I said that David Attenborough, cheap, you're doing voices that sound that you're really interested in what you're talking. And then we go to the script issue. If you have see spot run, see, spot run, you know, but many times you have to ask, Is this quick? How many seconds do we have? Well, this is in game. This is a shout out this is during battle. So you have to go see spot run. All those things are things which a voice talent should ask if they're not getting the directing? back? Is this stealth? Is this over battle? How quick do you need this? You know, those are questions because there's nothing worse than a bad director except for a bad scrap. Great quote. I like that. So with accents, because it's something that I someone specialized in in terms of like there's a difference between doing authentic accents. And then you can fool a native and then there's like, kind of stereotypical trope based sort of accents like you say, Have you like, how do you go about Did you just learn languages? Sorry, accents by osmosis. Do you just listen to it and kind of and follow the stereotypical form? Or do you go hang out with people who have been? Very nice check over time. It's hard to hang out with. But I will tell you an interesting thing about that. I listen a lot to maybe actors on screen. Okay. Game of Thrones, whatever. I'm not intentionally trying to listen. But if it's Scottish, I will listen to somebody. Now you know, Glaswegian and Edinburgh are two different accents, right? You want the one that is the most intelligible? And the most pulled back because everyone's afraid of offending? Somebody? No. You might be afraid of offending the real Brit. But I can tell you honestly, no two Brits think that each other's accents worth a shot. I've been in England, I've recorded a name. I was, you know, during this game, and I recorded in Southampton, and then I was brought up to London. And they would say, Okay, this was a ring cycle game for psygnosis. And it was not very good. But they were saying, We want this to be a cross between Manchester and Liverpool. And I go, well, Manchester is kind of more, you know, and, and liberals like john lennon. And I say, how do you expect to cross that there? Well, we could do that we'd be doing it ourselves. No one would know. So oftentimes, you know, it's, it's again, for most games, I think that you don't have to find the real person. Because, but here's here's a little tip for people who are bipoc, which is black, indigenous people of color, or binary, or trans, or whatever, that no, now everybody's asking for the complete f neck. You know, Stu, they're open to all ethnicities. This is what you're going to see in auditions a lot open to all ethnicities, blah, blah, blah. Well, I would say start taking theatres. Taking drama if you belong to one of those, okay? Because you would be a big fish in a small pond. Oftentimes people who are of a native thing are not voice actors. And I mean, or if they're getting into voice acting, they might have not had done characters, because when you're doing localization, a lot of those localization companies have native speakers that know how to do voice work, but they're doing medical transcription, or they're doing some sort of educational or, or online, whatever it is, and not games, not animation, things of that nature. So when it comes into looking, always listen, when you're around people listen to them, you know, try and pick up different things that you can watch TV, people told me once I know another guy that does coaching. And he said, I always tell people to go to a radio station online. For that country. I got to put this person down without telling them the name. And he says, and, for example, I'm going to play you something here. I've taken German and Spanish and French. But it's playing this radio station, I'm not going to be able to say it all in German, because I'm not that fluent in German. But you can take a fossil, you can do it with a rocket. Oh, okay, not Did you hear that, I'm going to play that part B bar, the bar, the dial. And so now I'm going to let you hear something from some guys that are not really German, but they're going to give you the good German accent. I really don't like your bond. I hate the music. I hate everything you're doing. Well, nobody wants Arnold Schwarzenegger, especially you have to kind of know something culturally that Germans kind of look down on Austrian, just like Japanese may look down on Korean. And it has to do with history, and stuff like that. So you want to be as nondescript, non regional as possible. Sometimes, for that reason, political reasons, and things of that nature. So you do have to listen, when you can listen to people talk. But the style of acting German actors, they kind of deliver everything like a machine gun. And because I've gotten the German lines from the game, and the actors, and here's what we did, and they will assign one actor, nine roles. And they all sound exactly the same, but they said they're not together, but they're not gonna care if a sound sounds the same. That's not how I do it. But okay, so that's the thing is that also Japanese, when you're looping are doing stuff over Japanese, usually, stereotypically anime, may have girls that are more of a high chip monkey kind of thing. And the guy's own monster, or they could be very kind of boring, you know, but it's a cultural thing. So you have to respect the culture. And looping is something that some people get into, it's the more difficult, but it is a different mindset, you can be a big star, and do ADR, you know, but you're not coming up with as many original voices and the ability to do timing on your own. As you're matching the timing of the lip flap, you know what I mean? So it's a more constricted thing, but you can be a big star in that field. But it's kind of like, in my opinion, and no offense, animate people and loving people, but it's kind of like the want to be DJ, that is a traffic reporter, you want to be it's just a different, different application of the voice. I'm not saying traffic records are not important, but it's a different set of you're not able to be as creative because you're limited within that time space to match the coming back to the you know, imitating foreign voices and you know, trying to inhabit the skin of others and being like an actor because I one of the things I've I've been thinking about the last especially well, especially the last year what with with the kind of with Black Lives Matter and, and lots of issues being highlighted around authenticity and, and privilege and that kind of thing. Like one of the things I've struggled with is someone who does accents and does imitations is like, when does it become socially unacceptable now because I feel like the ground has shifted in terms of being an actor because you know, you're if you're if you're imitating someone and it's meant to be funny, then that can seem like it's kind of mean. So I mean, have you ever come across those those issues yet? Or are you are you is your awareness heightened around those kind of things, I think is probably like gearing saying that in the last year or so that the attention is being given to not even allow us who could do a respectable accent, you know, and be believed by the big people to saying we need to give the opportunities, the people of color. And then there you have a lot of people in the Caucasian world saying, I'm not even going to touch that. I want the job to go to the right people. Now again, right, in my opinion would be who sounds the best and does the best work. Given all the people the chances who are of that ethnicity, sure, you know, but in my opinion, again, if those people aren't giving, you know, you can go way out of your way to try and find just to fit that bill, where you may have someone that fits it right then and there. So I think you have to have a little bit of leeway. But you're right. It's getting really political correctness. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, for me, like, I've kind of made the decision where it comes down to intention, if it's like, if you're, like, if it's anything to do with making fun of anyone because of their accent or whatever, then it's totally off the cards. But like you say, if you're doing a genuine performance of someone good, and you know, you're not kind of like, just, they're not just coming to you because you're of a certain ethnicity. Yeah, you know, maybe they're your audition like kind of with those notes. But it is it's, it's it is, it's a bit of a minefield, it's challenging to the world, isn't it? Especially as I was told you before, that the oftentimes, black people, and there's not many games that normally have gangbang stuff anymore, but they used to be, you know, you gotta be tougher, like you're born to the ghetto, you know, I'm saying, at versus the Hispanic up. What are you doing, man? There have been games like that. But a lot of the black actors, some of them that I've tried, they take offense, when I say, can you sound a little more ethnic? Because they're trying to sound like I went to drama school and they don't sound black at all, you know? So, there has been that challenge of, you know, when when I'm asking people, they wanted you to sound black and you don't, right? tries different types, isn't it? Because stereotypes, yeah, they are things that we they're like cultural hooks that we we recognize and it's an extra, it's like, well, I'm gonna I'm gonna put it on that hook. But then, like, the political correctness has meant that we don't want to stereotype people, people can be whatever they want. But you still you can see that there's a tension there isn't there between, you know, what people will recognize and what's actually being sort of, you know, racist or offensive, it's, well, have you noticed that with your accent, that, you know, the, when I was at at a trade show, I was down in the lobby once and I was listening to people that were from Australia and there for a game company. And I am sure you know this, but a lot of people don't, that if you sound like Crocodile Dundee. It's kind of like the Cockney version of English isn't, but you know, good, I might, or whatever. And you might be able to do Outback Steakhouse or something like that. But in general, I said, You guys don't sound Australian at all. And they looked at me and they go, what do you think Australian sounds like? And they say, That's because we're educated. And, you know, like, okay, so I haven't I think South African I think your accent if it's, you know, Kiwi. I think it's wonderful. And there should be more of a of a call for that because it's exotic. And it's not, you know, good IMEI is it's not offensive. It's not that kind of thing. But even South African, which is a little bit more cross between British and you know, Australian or peewee has an exoticness about it. This is no small portion. Hello, you know, are you being served that kind of thing, but it's got a a lovely like, Wow, I can't identify that, but I should like it. It's a It's a lovely accent. So I congratulate and I think that more people should be looking at, you know, the trouble. I think the trouble is, a lot of people who write for these parts. Don't know that any of the cultures they don't know what people can sound like, and they don't if they did, and I have had some weird requests. Like we want to cross between Peter Lorre and Daffy Duck. We want to cross between pig bud Bundy from married with children. And Dean came from Superman. You know, they give you these weird things that is an abomination that you're going okay I want to cross a rabbit with a jeep. They want it they wanted these this certain race that look like zombies with skulls hanging all over them but they were supposed to be smart astrologers they wanted a cross between ancient Peruvian and Celtic or over can't get Celtic will do Welsh. Or the farther north you get from England, the more of a little you have. I like to play rugby and oh, and can you imagine these zombie looking bangs? Are you big beasts? Yo guys, I want to play rugby Oh, you know, that kind of thing. So I think it's the problem that we have of the designers and the people that are making up some of these things that we could have so much more fun and so much more ability to use Kiwi accents and an Australian if they knew a that they could find the people that are out there like yourself right and be that it would make it a lot more interesting instead of here's your I think the most call for accents are British Russian. Maybe the Houston for that sir. Yes, sir. The soldier, you know kind of thing. Everything else. If you want to be a Scandinavian warrior or Valkyrie, maybe you would stand out if you could do it. Nigerian or a Kenya accent? You know jumbo holiday? You know that kind of mystery Santa's that kind of a thing. But in general the writers aren't writing. Yes, true. Going back to strange directions. I think you've just inspired me to come up with an annual award for the strangest direction. Yes. I think there have been some strange things like that. The combination plate of Yeah, make it a combo. And I would say I have said, that's like trying to cross a rabbit with a jeep. You know, it's just, it doesn't make logical sense. It's like a musician getting told. Can you make your music a little more plaid with salsa? Exactly. I mean, typically, musicians go through this too. Mm hmm. And so like, you must have because you sort of specialize or you, you have come to specialize in kind of alien noises. Like, like strange kind of sounds? Do you have to know what like animals sound like? Do you study kind of like what animals sound like? Or is it just purely it's not animals, because when we do our things, like when I was working for Starcraft two, and we were doing zurg and ezard, Kwame, we didn't know what she was gonna snipe, I was doing all these weird things. And then they would take you as 130 seconds of the sound file and add lions, tigers and bears. So that's what the sound designer will try and take your really unique thing. Like, why this is flapping my call? I am not doing a growl. You know what I mean? Yeah, this sounds really good if it's pitched down. But I was Philippa and Tim, to mock whatever, for darksiders. And was this giant creature with wings, you know, and then silica was a spider. And I fully expected them to put sound effects on it then, just as it was. Okay, so you never know, when you're doing a creature thing, whether you're going to have a really creative sound design in this kind of layer, you have so much You can't even understand what it is you're saying. But it has helped me you will have games that require you to sound like an animal. And sometimes they will provide you with a link to YouTube for the animal noise. But you'd be surprised that if you're going to be a lamb versus a sheep versus a goat, I don't think they really want the real thing because lambs and sheep side they're in pain. They also want you to, they want you to convey human emotions in those animal voices. And that's one of the toughest jobs you can do is say, Now we want you to imply that you're that you want someone to come over and pet you. But it also helps when you're doing animal things like like birds like to make kind of a big crop for a frontal beak. To get to get the facial, the emotional, physical thing of the animal really does help. And also to kind of look, act, pitcher face like and this is another thing where you're getting into different character voice This is going to mirror crop Come on funny, Frank. You know, that kind of a thing. So you can at least know how to change your voice. So if you may put that in your so called library and say, Okay, I can do yoga. You know, but they don't want you there. But maybe you can make this for another voice and say no, I'm using this kind of a thing for another character. So you can have people have done that where they make little recordings and have their own little libraries and things of that nature and then they can go back and pull on there. So that's just alone or whatever they can do. But conversely, if you're asked to do a Scottish accent, and all you can do is Sean Connery. I've had that happen. Okay, but I'm sure you know what I mean. So you can't just be a Sean Connery doing a Scottish accent you have to be able to apply it toward other sounds, not just do you use mnemonics to keep track of how many voices and get back into those those characters. Explain as in like for accents, for example, you like for say, Irish you have like hoity toity for lady potato and like so the little set pieces that just get you back into that vowel sit and that face shape. I wish I had them. That's a very good Have you know I will tell people that the call me in the morning over under after I'd love the chance to dance with you British thing? I don't do it myself because I've kind of, you know, got it already but the hoity toity the Irish thing is harder for me to do the oil, the oil, you know, that kind of thing. And they're more in the flesh than those aren't they? You know, they have a mother loyalty kind of a thing. But the other accent I won't do is French Canadian or pagent. All right, you know, all of all, boo, boo les and because it's kind of like an aberration of French. But I I just say no, I don't do that one, you know, but what voice what accents? Won't you do? That's a good question. I won't do accents. When it comes from authentic accent like I've got like, I've got three tiers of accent, I've got like, I can do this until the local, I've got like, this is a good party accent. And it'll form like a lot of people, especially slightly drunk people. And then like, the third one is just like, I just don't even know where to start. And that list the last list is getting fewer and fewer because I like to like when I come across one of the speakers like my thing I got obsessed with I listened to what's his name, The Daily Show the new guy, Noah, Trevor Noah his book a and it's funny that talks about his his whole past and he is amazing with African accents. He can just any. And this book, the audio book, he goes through, he reads all these different things that happened to him in these different African accents. And after that, I got a little bit obsessed with African accents. And I young, I just went went around trying to to find what the essence of the accent was. And I know that's not that's that's completely blunt, like consonants and and like, really the way it talked like this. And and when you hear someone doing it authentically, you suddenly like when you do it and just normal life, you kind of think like, Oh, is this a bit like, is this a bit racist? I feel a bit funny about doing doing, like, especially accents like that, but then you think I'm just talking in a different way. Like, this is just for me, I just want to explore how this feels in my mouth. And I think and that's good. Well, because not a lot of people can do the African accents. And I know that there's a difference between Nigeria and Kenya and things of that nature. But I will tell you when I was working for I think it was Diablo three, there was a witch doctor. And I was cast for the Barbarian and a witch doctor and I didn't. I ended up being released. But it was really a strange situation. I'll make it short. The Witch Doctor kind of made it a combination, almost like the Pirates of the Caribbean. Not the Voodoo priestess. I wasn't trying to make it. So African, you know, whatever I was, you know, and the one line was supposed to be they asked you how do you know he was lying? He admitted it to me right after I cheated his minions. Okay, so I would say that and then she'd say she'd go through and have me go back and she'd play me my, my part already that I done to stay in character and I wasn't dropping out of character. So I was getting a little bit weirded out. But then she says at the very end she goes, can we play the male? witch doctor? I swear to God, it's one of those guys who cannot talk English at all. You know, he's got it because yeah, a minute. After I did this minute, I said, I couldn't talk like that. You want me to talk like someone who does not speak English that way? Is Never mind. I got fired on the way home, you know, and it was not because I don't know. And then I heard later What was the chosen voice and hardly had any accent at all. So I'm saying there it is that you should really epitomize on what you're doing. But to they're going to make you pull it back and pull it back and pull it back because I was hired to do the world of avatar Disney promo. Hmm. They thought I was Caribbean. And it was like poem, the mystical mountains and a magical Villa floating mountains. mystical Welcome to found out I wasn't. And so it was a it was one of those things that they liked it. They still wanted it. And would you believe we did the whole thing and was just marvelous. I had a great time. And at the tagline It was like, now open it there were at Disney World Resort. They wanted that the same voice but no accident. World of avatar, only at the Walt Disney World Resort. Isn't that good that I was taking the other one. It breaks. It breaks the smell. I know. So I would never be afraid if you are not of the right. Color. Try it anyway. I've asked my agents, by the way, when it says we're looking for, you know, actual this ethnicity, I would say do you want me to do it? Or not? You know, I will ask permission. Do you want me to do it? And they'll say we're not gonna find the real one, do it? Or they might say yeah, we want the real thing. Just like when they're asking for kids. Kids, bless their hearts can be a special thing to deal with. And I'll leave Get a bat. But put it this way, if a kid's like we had this happen with tails for Sonic where all of you for that sake hit I wish us women. Hey, Shawn, it you know to do the kids voice and we're better not were easier to direct. You know what I mean? Usually, we are faster things of this nature. But they decided that this time they wanted real kids. Well, we went through three kids because they each reach puberty. by sea, of course, we had to use a guy's brother. Yeah, I know. And so that's the other thing too, is that when people who are saying, I have a kid to get, okay, try and get the kid in the business now. And but if you are hiring a real kid, realize that can happen. Depending on if you have sequels and things of that nature, that, that that can be an issue. But the fact that there are real kids and Disney wants kids, you know, they want the real thing. Just like they want celebrities. Imagine if Bart Simpson was voiced by an actual kid Originally, it would be like two seasons. No way did I know. And that's pretty much her natural. She has much of that natural voice. And Andrea Romano discovered her I guess listening to her at some ways and said you're on Did you hear how SpongeBob SquarePants got a story now, he was speaking at the convention center here at Comic Con. And you have to excuse my language because I'm going to swear, is that, okay? Because I'm going to quote, I'm going to quote where you said, I can kind of alternate a little if you want. My funny listening to him as well. He was on camera during a green screen, I think was insurance commercials or something of that nature. And they had a break. And he went down the hall and there was a Christmas commercial being filmed with elves, small people, you know. And there was one very irate one saying Gary, and they were cast me as a mother. But then I'm gonna kick somebody in. Now, he was telling the story at a hollywood party. Someone tapped him on the shoulder and said, come into my office tomorrow, I think I have a part for you. And that's how we got it. So that's another thing about being in the right place at the right time. Unfortunately, sometimes it's who you know, who you, you know, I'm saying it's to us. And so it's people say, Well, how do you break into the business? It's a lot of serendipity. It's a lot of who, you know, it's a lot of being recommended by people that are in the business. Sometimes it's a paid audition, where people pay to get a class from a casting director, and you better make it an active one. Because sometimes in this business, those who can do and those who can't teach that is a paid audition to be seen. Yeah, yeah. And I like that adage that luck favors the prepared. In terms of you've got to be ready, because that luck train comes along occasionally. And if you're ready, it'll pick you up. But if you're not really, it's just gonna go right by. That's true. Very true. So I think you've done a marvelous job, especially when you're coaching people and everything and, and I congratulate you, and I'm gonna probably ask for your coaching staff. Just before we wrap up today, I wanted to cover like a couple of things, because one of the things I've I mean, I've only dipped my toe into the kind of like the character and video game world. And it's, I've realized that it is such a different world to the commercial voiceover that you have to learn everything again. One of the things I really struggle with in these sessions is well, there's two things, there's exertion scripts, which I'm very familiar with, because, you know, exhausting and last days, what let's talk about acquisition scripts, and then we'll go on to the next topic. So once you're sort of, how do you go about because I just figured they were like, right, okay, now you're climbing a rope, can you do that for 20 seconds. And then like, you know, jumping on the table, and they all ended up sounding kind of the same all like six noises, like strategy. Let's just talk about generic and this could be different. I think that a lot of guys sound like gorillas going to the forest when they're doing a tax write. First strategy is always use your body and since I'm holding the stone, excuse me, for all the movement that I've had in here, but you've got to use you got to use you know, and then you've got to use your body to do the attacks and in general attacks would be consonants or the rough and that the being attack would be the and I didn't direct it. Okay, now you're hitting the eye now you're hitting the throat now you're hitting the guy, you know, so you can do your or I can make them juicy. You know? that kind of a thing that but nowadays they don't have action specific so you're not being throat slit head bashed, jumping into hot lava, you are light, medium, heavy, light, medium, heavy, and your death. You have to ask, Are you showing the cause of your death in your Yes. And how long do we have to die is only very few have allowed you to be hit balled your knees and do a faceplant. Most of them are like, you know, like, one second or two seconds. Because the fact is, most of these people that die or respond, and they come back immediately, and I'm going to sound like, I'm a gamer, right? But the fact is that, to do some weird things like the jump, bring your arms up. Now, you ask them Do you want the land? So it's the same thing as trying to ask people to do a natural laugh. To go haha, know, if you would do the spit take or something to release most of your air first. That little leftover makes it sound much more natural that Haha, you know, you don't want to have that whole thing. So you can do that. You have a two stage attack where you're maybe, you know, winding up that kind of deal. But when they're telling you that you're jumping over a log and somersaulting on the ground, you're going, Oh, look, you know, you have to be prepared to be asked some strange things, but in general is just the maybe the jump when the rope climb. And the breathing your boy, you can get hyperventilating really nicely, when they're saying doing your breathing. I always say do you want it so you can move it? So you might do three breaths like by doing similarly, not? Because then it would sound stupid. You know, and then you're doing the more out of breath ones, you know, like, but you you ask them that because you can really get hyperventilate and start getting dizzy during the breath. But that is one of the amounts that you'll probably be asked for is the breathing. And you could do a fall. And you have to ask how far do you fall? I always want to go away from the mic and fall away. No, no, no, be like right now. You got to be like with your face, right? They want to be able to cut it usually. thump as you as you land. But yeah, I think also use your body a lot. When you're doing that. And imagine that it hurts. Also, you're going to be asked to talk and pain, wounded. The wounded sound. My funny direction is pinch a loaf. Oh, I can't I'm trying to hurt it. But you know, I'm constipated. And that's one way to think of it to be sounding like you're in pain. When you take kind of turn your breathing and sounding like you're, you're gasping for air, you know? So those are little tricks that you can use. Fantastic. It's really good. Another one another big, big advice because this is another thing I struggle with these sessions is doing screams doing falls doing deaths. Exactly. It's hard on your voice. Like what's that? Exactly. But like, I have you? Like what's your strategy for maintaining voice health? Do you have warning signs where you're like, No, I've got to stop now. Otherwise, I'm gonna lose my voice. Or you just go I always tell people if you don't if you're not willing or wanting to ruin your voice stay out of the game industry. No, it's because sometimes they will. And I don't say it lightly because some games like iCast don't even have the amounts. But sometimes they will say this will require physical exertion. do not accept this audition if you're not willing to do it. In other words, if you're not willing to kill yourself, stay out of the oven. We're gonna remain. Yeah, so the trick is that you will always depending on now some people can be really snippy and say I'll only give you three I'll only give you one you know, you can do that and limit yourself but then what happens after I got through doing sendowl for Mortal Kombat. They had me do Shiva. And I said wait a minute, aren't we doing her emotes? Oh, you can do emotes in a different voice. Well, yeah, real this is from a top it was like technical their studios in LA with around now. But they were went to Vegas. I said nobody's ever done that before. Oh my god, I was a superstar because I could emote in a different, you know, voice which is hard for a lot of people to do. But I'd say that the hardest thing the screams are not as hard as the as when you're clapping your voice and you're doing things like that, that that or the likes of the pig or those kind of things, or the clicker wasn't so hard. That's not really hard. But those kinds of things when you're tightening up the scope. I've had it so that I couldn't drink water. I mean, they'll give you the honey and the tea and everything else that you'd throw Spray, whatever. When you're tight, you're tight. And you're kind of done. If you can ask for maybe 10 minutes, 15 minutes, you may have your throat and sweat a little bit. It might not, you know, so you just have to be prepared and be prepared that maybe the next day, you're not going to be able to audition for much. Yeah, that's tough, isn't it? Like, that's definitely the thing that I've struggled with most is that, yeah, it takes me out for for for a day afterwards, I make changes my fundamental voice, my normal speaking voice for the commercials close. Yeah. And then, so you asked to do everything last, including, if it's difficult for you to do a deep voice. You don't want to strain yourself during your higher voice and all the emotes first, because as you need the loose cords to do the deep voice. So you might notice that if you were he'd been screaming in your higher voice, it's gonna tighten up your throat, so you can't get down into your resonant voice as quickly. So you want to do your deep voice stuff first, and then your screen. And those kind of stuff would do last otherwise, you're gonna sound kind of like this on Joan Rivers, you know. And so you're going to actually have this, this sound of being very, I know, you probably had it when you're when you have a voice that you're out of your voice, and you're trying to sound like this. That's what's gonna happen. When you ruin your voice. You're gonna sound basically like this. Yeah, exactly. Well, it's terrible, isn't it? So, like, and finally, like, how do you keep it? You've been doing this for such a long time? You obviously don't get bored of it, you're still How do you keep enthusiastic about it? Do you? Do you have those days when you're like, Ah, man, we should get a different trouble us still, like 100% I love this. Well, because you went from all these different people, and different characters, and everything is a new challenge. You always have new characters that come up. So that's the newness of it, and being able to make something better than it could be see spot run, you know, I mean, you're able to bring new life, it's our job. That's our job. I mean, why are we here? If it's not to bring new life and to find people and give new people opportunities, I do that all the time. People are always thinking me, you know, I want to be added to your talent pool, that kind of thing. So I will give them the whole rundown. I think that's what makes it fun is because it's always a new scenario. Even if I'm doing another Star Trek thing. We will have new characters, we're sure you have your captains and your admirals and whatever. But I love it when there are especially I love it when there's creatures what have you. But when you're working with a whole different group of people, that's your family. You know, I mean, and me being pretty much alone. That's that's enabling me to vicariously live in an outside world and not have to play the games to be part of. Well, thank you so much for your time today. Just before Did you still do that? There was that great monologue that used to do which started which started we'll start out as babies. Oh, yeah, we'll do that one. Could you perform that one for us? Sure. I'll start at a baby. And then as days go by, we get a little older material. We shouldn't cry. It goes through school trying to be cool. And then we graduate. Some of us might be mommies, others work or even date. As we grow. We wonder what are we smart are just a full. Now some others are back in diapers again. And others even draw. Well done. Thank you so much. That's that's one of my favorite monologues. Perfect. Thank you. Such a pleasure. And you're such a great Interviewer And I hope we did okay. We did great. Thank you so much. Thank you.