Dissecting The Tasks Of A Producer In An Audio Production Company

| Thursday, May 30, 2013
By Rena Hudson


Becoming a music producer would be an easy venture or a difficult one. This can be determined on your interest on the matter as well as having a basic knowledge of music. Those who are really inclined to that of being a sound maker can really be a master of their own audio production company.

Producers are professionals and that is a fact. They are tasked with overseeing the production of the music of an artist. They gather ideas for a program, select artists or their music, coaches musicians in the studio, supervises recording session, mixing, and mastering by the engineers. That is not all, but to put it simply, they have a big part in shaping the careers of would be celebrities.

Being an all around instrument player and having an excellent skill in sound determination would serve very beneficial for producers. The knowledge of having to play various instruments as well as knowing how to produce the best quality sound for these instruments are an advantage. In fact, most of the successful producers today are talented artists. These people know how to create songs and know how the instruments are set up to give the desired output.

Today, many people are able to explore this venture. Even if they have no formal training, a lot of programs and applications help them create their own sound. Computers provide those tools over the internet and the tasks of mixing and mastering can already be done at home. Technology is really able to help out the common man in their quest of making good output.

However, structured formal classes can provide you a broad knowledge in this field. Training schools offer such programs that train students in digital audio production. A graduate certificate is then obtained once you complete their two or four year course.

Some successful producers do not rely on structured classes. To work their way on the top, they learn from talented professionals and making an eye catching resume to audio industry executives can be part of the process. They learn from the experienced masters of the trade and take it with them once they venture out on their own.

Importantly, you must know how the recording industry works. Being involved with legal contracts and copyrights as well as handling businesses with artists is something producers have to look out for. It is for this case they are needed to think like entrepreneurs to succeed. They must have an idea on how to market and sell their results within a given budget when the time comes.

Although most of the record producers are involved in record labels creating recording artist under a contract, some are also employed in working for sound creation in movies, music videos, commercials, and even in video games. Some are full time employees, while some are bosses in their own companies.

In summary, making your way to the top involves you to be known. Clients will come to you when they see you to be socially reliable, good in giving service, and when you are known to be an expert in producing the best quality within a budget and a given duration. Being professional would definitely spring you and your audio production company up to the top of the charts in the music scene.




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Voice Over Production Is Used In A Variety Of Media Contexts

| Wednesday, May 29, 2013
By Rena Hudson


Voice over production techniques are used in a host of television, film and radio dramas, for a variety of reasons. But it is often unclear as to what people actually mean when they use the term. This article will help to explain what the term actually means, and why artists and film makers of various kinds use the technique in their works.

'Off camera commentary' is another term which is often synonymous with voice over, and it is certainly a phrase which helps to add clarity to any definition of the term. Voice over production basically refers to any voice which the audience hears which is not part of the film world, a 'non-diagetic' sound, to give it an accurate description. So it is a voiced narrative which comes from off-screen, which is separate to the sounds and dialogue of the action itself which occurs in the film.

The use of the technique is not confined to film makers and producers of television programmes either, though they are the two media in which it is perhaps most often utilised. A voice over can sometimes be found in theatre productions. It can even be used in radio dramas, though the director usually has to show considerable skill in pulling it off successfully.

This kind of narration is often used at the beginning of movies, often to establish some kind of narrative structure that enables the audience to understand the events that they are likely to see soon. In genres such as 'film noir', the voice over often occurs throughout, with the main character in the film narrating certain passages to add colour and detail to the story. The narration in this sort of example often recalls the first person narrative of a hard-boiled crime story.

Sometimes, the technique is used to help bring context to a flashback in a film, where a character's thoughts about something which happened in the past are voiced while the action unfolds. The actor who plays a character in the film often provides the vocals for this, though sometimes it can be voiced by an older actor. This is often the case when a film is looking back to events which occurred in a character's childhood.

The usual way in which this technique is utilised is for the voice over to be recorded and added to the film during the production process. Obviously, this cannot be done with theatre or live radio performance though. Some producers in live theatre may pre-record some off-stage narration though, simply to be expedient.

Television is where many of us will have heard this technique used most often though, and it is typical of documentaries to use it. It can help to fill out details which are not shown on screen, and to provide an audience with more context. Wildlife documentaries in particular, with their focus on animal behaviour, utilise the technique frequently.

It can therefore be seen that voice over production is a commonly used technique. It allows film makers and other artists to add depth to their project, and to reinforce the narrative or plot. Sometimes voiced by specialists, the technique has a long history of use in the movies and other narrative art forms.




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