Audiobooks discussion
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Listener's likes and dislikes
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Alan
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Jul 16, 2014 01:48PM

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I mostly just want my narrators to not be Casey Affleck. Aside from that, a quality soundbooth is important. Breathing or smacking noises are offenses punishable by death. If voices are done, they must be consistent.
Lastly it is important to realize that some people just aren't cut out for narrating.

I mostly just want my narrators to not be Casey Affleck. Aside from that, a quality soundbooth is important. Breathing or smacking noises are offenses punis..."
LOL, blunt as usual, J, but I have to agree with all that except the Casey Affleck part, who I've never heard.

Dislikes - dry mouth/swallowing, not pronouncing places right.

- Music which the narrator has to talk over (it's too hard listening to competing sounds).
- Male narrators doing silly falsettos or breathy Marilyn Munroe-style voices for women. Female narrators doing silly voices for men.
- A flat delivery with little variety.
- Shouting, even if that's what it says the character is doing in the book. It's seriously painful to the ears and interrupts the flow of reading. If you can't get across shouting in any other way apart from massively increasing volume you don't know how to use your voice.
Likes:
- Crisp, clear delivery.
- Good distinguishing between character voices without going overboard (i.e. do character voices rather than cartoon voices).
- Matching the narrator to the book in terms of accent and gender, e.g. having a good female RP accented voice for Jane Austen. Ideally, if it's a first person they should be the gender of the character; if it's 3rd person they should either be the gender of the main character or the author, whichever suits the book best. My big bugbear is English books with English characters read by American narrators. (Although I don't care about the narrator's gender and accent so much as good delivery).

Finally, all consumer dislikes can often be aesthetically summarized by the following: lack of willing suspension of disbelief. That is, when the listener doesn't believe an accent is authentic, doesn't believe a character is realistically portrayed, is introduced to a noise, an affect that emotionally disconnects them from the narrative, they can no longer willingly suspend their disbelief, and remain involved in the story. They are emotionally removed--out of it.
In other words, we can't lose ourselves in the story if the narrator won't "let us".

Totally agree with you Paul. Everything should be tending towards helping the listener connect emotionally to the material.
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