Author Topic: How do I get that special sound in voices?  (Read 1856 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

How do I get that special sound in voices?
I tried to search around here on the site, didn't find anything, but if you know this exists in a good explanation how to, please link :)

When I'm recording my own voice, I use sometimes like Audacity and try to use my voice to get different kind of voices. One thing i haven't been successful in is to make the Voice kinda sound like its a bad mic, not to bad, not as clear I have and you sometimes here on ventrilo talks, more studding, noisily, like in the Freespace 2 campaigns.

I hope you know what I mean, cuz I haven't find a way to get it right.

PS: A hint, ehm. If you have the Speech on the controlpanel, Microsoft Sam has kinda to much of that kind of voice, and its a robotvoice. But if you have downloaded some new ones, like Microsoft Mike, his "recording" sound is very good. Id like that in my voice recording ^^

 

Offline Goober5000

  • HLP Loremaster
  • 214
    • Goober5000 Productions
Re: How do I get that special sound in voices?
You mean the way the voice sounds like it's coming over a radio?  In-mission messages versus briefing messages?

There should be a "radio filter" in most audio editors for that.

 

Offline ReeNoiP

  • 27
  • I FRED
Re: How do I get that special sound in voices?
In audacity you can use a FFT filter. Google "radio effect audacity".
Uncharted Territory is released. But I still need voice actors

 
Re: How do I get that special sound in voices?
Look around here: http://joedale.typepad.com/integrating_ict_into_the_/2008/09/morph-your-voic.html
Don't forget to remove noise before starting the effects.

 
Re: How do I get that special sound in voices?
That sound is the result of rolling off the high and low frequencies, leaving only the midrange.  That's pretty much all that a 'radio filter' does, although it may boost some frequencies at the cutoff point.

Grab any parametric or semi-parametric (easier) EQ, or run the signal through a band pass filter (or through a low pass filter AND a high pass filter), tweak to taste.

If you're confused about any of these terms, wikipedia is your friend ..  :pimp:

  

Offline Herra Tohtori

  • The Academic
  • 211
  • Bad command or file name
Re: How do I get that special sound in voices?
Independent research has shown that good results are achieved with just cutting off the low end of the spectrum, say, highpass filter with 500 Hz threshold.

It makes a reasonably good "small speaker driven at high volume" -type of effect, which is what makes the radio sound "radio-like" according to the rule of perception. The amplitude of the signal might need to be boosted, possibly with volume-levelling filter.

Cutting off both low AND high frequencies might end up producing more realistic sound effect, but not necessarily better as a whole...
There are three things that last forever: Abort, Retry, Fail - and the greatest of these is Fail.