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Now that I have my feet wet

 
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Steve Saylor
Talent and/or Voice Producer



Joined: 07 Nov 2006
Posts: 14

PostPosted: Thu Feb 22, 2007, 01:38 (GMT)    Post subject: Now that I have my feet wet Reply with quote

A couple of paying gigs later, I'm starting to realize how crummy my demo was. I took a stab at massaging it a bit here, but I'm beginning to think it needs to be scrapped and completely redone. I'd like some feedback from critical ears.

Any comments or suggestions are very appreciated!



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Demo rev 2

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Scott Pollak
Talent and/or Voice Producer - Voice Seeker



Joined: 05 Mar 2004
Posts: 3828

PostPosted: Thu Feb 22, 2007, 03:35 (GMT)    Post subject: Reply with quote

For starters, Steve, what the heck is that opening 3-2-1 bit?? If it's supposed to be a slate, it just ain't working. Honestly I couldn't even understand the verbiage.

And from that point on I was underwhelmed by the demo. It's not a good one, Steve. Your opening "family portraits' piece is about as flat as it gets. You sound like you're an undertaker afraid to crack a smile. The California pizza piece was not good either. I'm not sure if you were going for hard-sell or energy or what, but it was, quite simply, a bad read.

I hate to sound like I'm ripping you to shreds, because I'm not. But I am ripping your demo to shreds. Steve, it's just a stinker. Your reads show no life, no real TRUE emotion although you attempted to fake it with some artificial inflection, and overall very poor production quality.

You really need to go back to square one on many things here, and the demo should be the last of them. You need training and practice. I do wish you well, though, my friend.

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Scott R. Pollak
Warm. Real. Natural.

www.voicebyscott.com
SaVoa 07003
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Robert Jadah
Talent and/or Voice Producer



Joined: 17 Jun 2005
Posts: 2627

PostPosted: Thu Feb 22, 2007, 13:52 (GMT)    Post subject: Hey, Saylor Reply with quote

I'll be Paula to Scott's Simon here, Steve.
(hey, four names in one sentence!)
That was a nice effort. The Dad thing at the end wasn't too bad: just short and dramatic enought to carry a small jab.
The voice is nice, too.
But your song selection needs work, Steve, and - for a demo - you will have to go to one of our Mad Mixers to put some better production into the snippets. It's hard enough to polish the vocal end; trying to become a production pro overnight is just too much.
And the delivery is a tad bizarre.
Listen, for example, to your dropped tones on "caring FOR" "3,000 MILES", and "specific AREAS", among many more.
Those are mysterious places for the bottom to drop out of the phrases.
You did your thing. There's hope.
Now, back to the drawing board.
Voce On!
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Steve Saylor
Talent and/or Voice Producer



Joined: 07 Nov 2006
Posts: 14

PostPosted: Thu Feb 22, 2007, 15:46 (GMT)    Post subject: Reply with quote

Scott Pollak wrote:
For starters, Steve, what the heck is that opening 3-2-1 bit?? If it's supposed to be a slate, it just ain't working. Honestly I couldn't even understand the verbiage.


Actually, it was a last minute toss in. I did that read for a game and although it was way overproduced, I thought it would create some contrast before the second piece that's a little campy. Good point on being difficult to understand.

Scott Pollak wrote:
And from that point on I was underwhelmed by the demo. It's not a good one, Steve. Your opening "family portraits' piece is about as flat as it gets. You sound like you're an undertaker afraid to crack a smile.


I don't know that I've ever been called an undertaker before, but I can see your point.

Scott Pollak wrote:
The California pizza piece was not good either. I'm not sure if you were going for hard-sell or energy or what, but it was, quite simply, a bad read.

I hate to sound like I'm ripping you to shreds, because I'm not. But I am ripping your demo to shreds. Steve, it's just a stinker.


No Scott, don't hold back ... tell me what you really think. Wink

Scott Pollak wrote:
Your reads show no life, no real TRUE emotion although you attempted to fake it with some artificial inflection, and overall very poor production quality.


Production is by far my weak point. I'm still learning the ropes with the software, and I don't have a lot of material available at the moment (beds/fx) to spice things up. I'm working on that end of things. But if you have some specific suggestions, I would love to hear them!

Scott Pollak wrote:
You really need to go back to square one on many things here, and the demo should be the last of them. You need training and practice. I do wish you well, though, my friend.


Thanks for the feedback. Lots to consider here. I do think that once this God forsaken headcold clears (going on week 3!!) I'll go back and re-read these scripts. It's been awhile since I did them, and I'm confident I can do a better job now than I did then.
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Victor Harris
Talent and/or Voice Producer - Voice Seeker



Joined: 23 Oct 2006
Posts: 612

PostPosted: Thu Feb 22, 2007, 16:03 (GMT)    Post subject: Reply with quote

Steve, here is an example of better production along with tightning up your spot by 2.5 seconds with some time compression. U still have too much hesitation while speaking. Rehearse more and have it down before recording. Wink
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J.S. Gilbert
Talent and/or Voice Producer - Voice Seeker



Joined: 09 Nov 2003
Posts: 629

PostPosted: Fri Feb 23, 2007, 20:26 (GMT)    Post subject: Wow Reply with quote

You got a couple of paying gigs? Who payed who? Weere the gigs From here? Where these gigs from people whose lives you saved? Are the companies still in business?

Just kidding.

I thought I had the rep for being the newbie shredder on here. What gives?

I liked your demos. I had been having trouble going to sleep and after the first 38 seconds of listening I was out like a light. God forbid don't do a radio spot becuase if people listen while they're driving there could be a fatality accident.

Read the posts. Go and take some acting classes. do some improv. Study commercials - radio and tv. etc., etc. , etc.
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