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Voice Overs Have Influence

Date Published: 10th August 2007
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When you begin to think of it logically, you will understand how important it is for your audio project to have the right voice behind it. After all, voices are persuasive. Even though they often take a backseat in our minds to the way a person looks, without the perfect voice, looks ain't nothin'. And if the voice is all a person has to go on – for instance, in a radio commercial – then the voice becomes the most important thing in the world.

A person who comprehends just how to use their vocal capabilities can control another person just by speaking. This is a startling concept the first time you consider it, but when you think about some of the most famous voices in the world, you will understand just how correct that is. Consider, for example, the actor Michael Wincott.


He's an attractive guy, but of course in the world of acting that doesn't mean a whole lot. Good-looking guys are a dime a dozen. But this guy gets role after role after role based on his vocal talent He has a voice that can keep you looking over your shoulder, long after the movie is over, because you're just a little worried that the latest Michael Wincott character may just be waiting to pounce. Remember the movie, The Count of Monte Cristo? He was the warden with the whip and the gravelly voice. Fans of the movie weren't quite sure which was more frightening, the whip – or that voice. That voice is what gets him contracts.

Then there's Clint Eastwood. Of course, that unflinching, squinty stare of his is something to write home about. But what do people do when they're pulling off their best Eastwood impression? They give some love to the stare, but mostly they love the way he said, “Come on punk. Make my day.” Like Wincott, Eastwood has a gravelly characteristic in his voice. But back in the day, he knew where all the pauses were supposed to be, and that made him something worth watching. He was worth watching because he was worth hearing.


Another actor who knew what to do with his voice was Marlon Brando. Now this actor had a nasally cotton-mouth voice that, untrained, would have driven people crazy. But he became an actor. He trained that voice. He took something that stood out and made it a trademark. The rest, my friend, was timing. When he said, “I made him an offer he couldn't refuse,” as the Godfather, he didn't just say a cleverly written line – he said it with emphasis. With weight. What we are responding to isn't something these guys do because of who they are. They've been schooled. Therefore, when they acted those lines, the audience never knew what hit them. But they knew that it was profound.

Of course Michael Wincott, Clint Eastwood and Marlon Brando won't be available for your project, but they make great models to study when you are learning how voices affect listeners. You want to use some of the same principals in selecting your voice actor, or in determining whether to use one. You are not the only one with a message for the public. There are thousands of other messages out there in addition to yours. You will have to seduce listeners, and that means getting and holding on to their attention. A powerful voice can do that.

Terry Daniel Provides High-Quality Voice Over Talent for Every Kind of Media. Visit His Website for a Demonstration of His Voice Over
Services
at: http://AmazingVoiceTalent.com
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