{"id":210615,"date":"2019-10-10T16:19:27","date_gmt":"2019-10-10T20:19:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.greatvoice.com\/?p=210615"},"modified":"2019-10-10T16:19:27","modified_gmt":"2019-10-10T20:19:27","slug":"voice-over-practice-tips","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/greatvoice.com\/voice-over-practice-tips\/","title":{"rendered":"Voice Over Practice Tips"},"content":{"rendered":"

Professional musicians can teach us a lot about how to do better voice overs.<\/p>\n

Guitarists, for example, study the greats by picking a song, listening to it over and over, singing it with and without the music, figuring it out on the guitar, writing it down in their ‘lick book’, and finally mastering the song by playing it over and over slowly for weeks, months and years.<\/p>\n

If you’re intending to do great voice overs, a similar process will help you learn.
\nI call the process “tape and ape” and in this week’s Inside Voice Over I break it down for you step by step.<\/p>\n

Watch this week’s short training video Here Now<\/strong><\/p>\n