The Voice Actor's Guide
to Home Recording shows both aspiring and established voiceover actors how
to set up and effectively use their own inexpensive - but
professional-sounding - personal recording studio.
For many years, recording
voiceovers was the exclusive domain of commercial studios. Even a
simple voice audition meant a trip to a studio, an ad agency, or an agent's
office. Today voiceover actors are increasingly producing voice tracks
for corporate narration, radio spots, animation, games, and other dialogue
projects from their own home studios.
To survive in this highly
competitive field, you need to learn and master basic production
techniques. Authors Jeffrey P. Fisher and Harlan Hogan show you how to
use a personal computer, reasonably-priced home-studio equipment, and the
Internet to make professional-quality home recordings quickly and easily.