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A common effect in film and tv but how?
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Topic: A common effect in film and tv but how? (Read 1560 times)
«
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March 23, 2006, 10:36:47 PM »
toneranger33
Member
Posts: 15
A common effect in film and tv but how?
I’m sure you can picture the scene but how do we create it in radio drama?
The effect I’m looking for is some-ones inner thoughts as they’re mind recollects something.
Like the voice inside your head, what you don’t get them?
Idea is the speaker is not only narrating a tale but at the same time, you hear there thoughts on what they have just said.
Any ideas.
TIA
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Reply #1
«
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March 23, 2006, 10:49:06 PM »
zemlin
Member
Posts: 2761
A common effect in film and tv but how?
I'm thinking it's just a reverb effect. Record two vocal tracks - the dialogue voice and the inner voice. Apply reflections and reverb to the inner voice.
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Karl Zemlin -
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Reply #2
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March 23, 2006, 11:01:17 PM »
SteveG
Administrator
Member
Posts: 8319
A common effect in film and tv but how?
Quote from: zemlin
I'm thinking it's just a reverb effect. Record two vocal tracks - the dialogue voice and the inner voice. Apply reflections and reverb to the inner voice.
That's about it - but try it with rather less early reflections on the inner voice than you might use for 'normal' reverb, and you need to get the voice perspectives correct too - the inner voice should speak quietly, nearer to the mic than the dialogue voice.
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Reply #3
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March 24, 2006, 12:40:15 AM »
RossW
Member
Posts: 224
A common effect in film and tv but how?
Reverb (and perhaps some filtering to a narrower bandwidth) is the classic way to represent an internal thought in audio... Ken Nordine is the master of the technique.
I'd suggest possibly adding a subtle musical effect under the voice -- a very low-level drone, repetitive bowed strings (don't know the proper musical term), a sort of bubbly undercurrent, etc. Just something minimalist and
organic
-sounding (!?) to set the voice off from the rest of the dialog.
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Reply #4
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March 24, 2006, 04:10:30 AM »
blurk
Member
Posts: 393
A common effect in film and tv but how?
I'm not a radio person, but my sense of logic suggests that the speaking voice should have the reverb since it is in a physical space, but the inner voice should be dry since it is disembodied.
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Reply #5
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March 24, 2006, 05:22:51 AM »
Emmett
Member
Posts: 426
A common effect in film and tv but how?
Much of it is proximity. On TV, most of the voices are not from close, in studio mics. A lot also has to do with delivery.
To do this, I voice the normal voice part from about a foot away...For the "thought" part, I mic the voice from about 2". Then I jack up the bass (80-125Hz) on the thought section. Sometimes I widen the space by delaying one of the channels by about 6ms. Also, lots more compression (smooth) on the thought voice.
Emmett
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Reply #6
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March 24, 2006, 07:03:46 AM »
SteveG
Administrator
Member
Posts: 8319
A common effect in film and tv but how?
Quote from: blurk
I'm not a radio person, but my sense of logic suggests that the speaking voice should have the reverb since it is in a physical space, but the inner voice should be dry since it is disembodied.
It
seems
to work better the other way around! I think that this may have more to do with working conventions and established practices (which would loosely translate to genre) than logic, though.
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Reply #7
«
on:
March 27, 2006, 12:06:18 PM »
toneranger33
Member
Posts: 15
A common effect in film and tv but how?
Thanks all for your help and replies.
Toneranger33
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Reply #8
«
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March 29, 2006, 10:48:01 PM »
BFM
Member
Posts: 853
A common effect in film and tv but how?
I tend to agree with Emmett and Steve, this is best achieved by changing the delivery. Reverb effects will give the speech a dreamy quality, and maybe even a sense of the past. Our inner voice when we're thinking is a quiet whispering voice, there is no echo at all! Although William Shakespeare took even this inner voice to magnificent levels, all of 400 years ago in his "soliloquy"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soliloquy
.
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Reply #9
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March 30, 2006, 02:52:18 AM »
DeluXMan
Member
Posts: 910
A common effect in film and tv but how?
I would concur with reverb and bandwidth narrowing.
For the "psyco" effect add echos.
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=DeluX-Man=
Reply #10
«
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March 30, 2006, 03:49:56 PM »
Andrew Rose
Member
Posts: 737
A common effect in film and tv but how?
Think of Homer Simpson's conversations with himself...
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Andrew Rose
http://www.pristineaudio.com
Reply #11
«
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April 04, 2006, 03:51:31 PM »
zemlin
Member
Posts: 2761
A common effect in film and tv but how?
Quote from: Andrew Rose
Think of Homer Simpson's conversations with himself...
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Karl Zemlin -
www.cheap-tracks.com
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AudioMasters Community FTP site
Reply #12
«
on:
April 08, 2006, 10:30:15 PM »
DeluXMan
Member
Posts: 910
A common effect in film and tv but how?
Homer looks in bakery window:
"MMMMmmmmm... erotic cakes!" "ahaghahggahghgha.."
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=DeluX-Man=
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