banter
Welcome to my blog, Banter.
I’ll start, you chime in—I really want to hear from you!
“Professional” Voice vs. Natural Voice
Recently, I spoke with Seth Barrish, an actor, director, teacher, and Co-Artistic Director of the Barrow Group. Seth’s teaching has influenced more than just my acting: his work has profoundly influenced my work as a communication coach and, perhaps most importantly, as a communicator. Seth uses techniques that seem to tease out truly human behavior in all its quirky glory. In my work with leaders, speakers, and communicators, I value the beauty of human imperfection and rely on the skills and techniques I learned in Seth’s class. Seth used the Conversation Exercise to help actors …Read on.
Freeing the Voice from Habit: Accent, Vocal-Fry and Up-Speak
ACCENT vs. AFFECTATION or ( TRENDY VOCAL PATTERNS)
Accents are wonderful—we all have them! Accents are determined by country, region, culture, family, and even generation. Accents only cause a problem if the audience cannot understand our communication. So, if there is a possibility that even one person might lose our meaning due to our accents, make sure every word is heard and understood by enunciating clearly.
Affectation, on the other hand, is determined by trend.
We’re looking at the two I hear most often:
Vocal fry and up-speaking.
Vocal-fry is fine(ish). I don’t like it because I know how it impacts the vocal folds over the long-term. Not good.
As a teen, I heard it mostly in surfer and skier dudes. Now I hear it mostly in young women.
I want us all to have choice about how we use our voices, so if vocal-fry is a vocal quality you choose, go for it. But look into the physical impact.
If we find ourselves falling into vocal-fry unwittingly and want to stop, the first thing to do is…Read on.
Vocal presence: learn from the professionals by listening to the radio
This week, as you drive, or cook or even watch the news (you might have to close your eyes), listen to the voices of the hosts, guests, reporters, interviewers. Just listen. Notice. Next week we will do more with this.