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Jodi@VoiceoversAndVocals.com

Archives for November 2020

Interview with Audio Producer & Voice Talent, Macha Gruber – Part 2

November 25, 2020 by Jodi Krangle

I continue my conversation with Macha Gruber. In this second half of the interview, we discuss everything from advertising to diversity in voice acting to COVID to the Keto diet.  This part of our interview is even better than the first part! 

Tune in to hear Macha and I discuss:

  • The importance of imaging for radio and how the voice actor becomes part of the brand
  • How voices have changed 
  • The increase of female voices on voice overs
  • The increase of diverse voices on voice overs
  • Not being in competition with voice actors
  • How Macha and I are both looking forward to hearing more diverse voices in areas that aren’t only meant specifically for diverse voices
  •  The changing dynamics of diversity in general
  • What Macha is currently doing
  • Family dynamics in this quarantine era
  • How COVID has affected my singing gigs
  • What COVID really looks like in the US versus what’s being shown on TV (no one really knows!)
  • What COVID has done to advertising and audio that’s needed 
  • How major tragedy effects the audio in general
  • The comeback of humor in advertising
  • The humor that’s coming back to advertising from this current situation
  • The balance between being crude and being humorous
  • Keeping anger out of advertising 
  • The death of the sexy read
  • The birth of sophistication with a woman’s voice
  • Her true love of coaching and hopefully being able to come back to it
  • The love of being on a team and loving the work she does with her coaching clients
  • Her undertaking of Keto in COVID
  • Finding Keto goodies at the store

 

If you’d like to get in contact with Macha Gruber, you can find her:
Website: www. machacreative.com
Instagram: www.instagram.com/machacreative or www.instagram.com/machagruber
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/missmacha

 

This episode was very skillfully made to sound beautiful by the talented Humberto Franco (http://www.humbertofranco.com/).

Would you consider reviewing the Audio Branding Podcast?  If so, here’s the Apple Podcast link: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/audio-branding/id1489042453  And if you like what you hear (and read!) – please do share it with anyone you think might be interested. Thanks so much!

And if you’re interested in crafting an audio brand for your business, why not check out my FREE download – 5 Tips For Implementing An Intentional Audio Strategy at https://voiceoversandvocals.com/audio-branding-strategy/ 

Filed Under: Audio Branding Tagged With: advertising rules, audio, COVID-19, diverse voice actors, diversity, family dynamics, female voice actor voices, female voice actors, humor in advertising, keto diet, radio imaging, singing, voice acting, voice coaching

Interview with Audio Producer & Voice Talent, Macha Gruber – Part 1

November 18, 2020 by Jodi Krangle

I’m so excited to chat with Macha Grueber. She’s done some amazing things in the audio world and I have to tell you –  I’ve been looking forward to hearing her perspective on the current status of the audio branding world. Macha is a professional voice actor and has spent the better part of 15 years in the audio industry, doing everything from voice acting to now being part of the elite creative team at iHeartRadio. This is quite the interview and we had so much fun chatting!

Tune in to hear Macha and I discuss:

  • Macha’s take on COVID-19
  • How helpful having a home studio has been
  • Her first introduction to audio- being part of a pirate radio studio
  • Going to college to be a chiropractic doctor
  • How she transitioned away from chiropractors to being a radio show host
  • Her first take at doing her own audio imaging
  • How making promos led to her going to broadcasting school
  • Transitioning away from being ON air into creating audio imaging 
  • Where imaging for radio came from
  • The background on radio station imaging and how it affects ratings 
  • What’s changed now- length of promos and what promos sound like
  • The places radio shows up now versus 20 years ago
  • Listening to radio stations at home on smart speakers
  • Transition into iHeartRadio
  • Being kicked out after her first internship 
  • Her first gig with Clear Channel
  • The in between time- working in the real world and doing audio imaging on her own
  • Her experience creating demos and doing voice over
  • Trends Macha has seen in commercials- both visual and audio
  • The effects of the millennial craze
  • What makes good audio branding 
  • The impact of writing on a good commercial 
  • How audio recordings happen in the commercial world
  • The importance of theater of the mind for commercials versus a voice over
  • How sound design affects the entire commercial
  • Turn around time for commercials 

 

If you’d like to get in contact with Macha Gruber, you can find her:
Website: www. machacreative.com
Instagram: www.instagram.com/machacreative or www.instagram.com/machagruber
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/missmacha

 

This episode was very skillfully made to sound beautiful by the talented Humberto Franco (http://www.humbertofranco.com/).

Would you consider reviewing the Audio Branding Podcast?  If so, here’s the Apple Podcast link: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/audio-branding/id1489042453  And if you like what you hear (and read!) – please do share it with anyone you think might be interested. Thanks so much!

And if you’re interested in crafting an audio brand for your business, why not check out my FREE download – 5 Tips For Implementing An Intentional Audio Strategy at https://voiceoversandvocals.com/audio-branding-strategy/

Filed Under: Audio Branding Tagged With: audio branding, audio imaging, broadcasting school, Clear Channel, COVID-19, home studio, iHeartRadio, imaging from radio, radio commercials, radio disc jockey, radio rating, theater of the mind, voice over

Changing the Shape of Music

November 11, 2020 by Jodi Krangle

Music can have a powerful effect on our feelings, our behavior, even how we see the world around us. But what if music itself can react to our feelings?  Weav Run, an award-winning workout app that instantaneously adjusts a song’s tempo to match the listener’s own pace, offers just one example of the fascinating potential of dynamic music.

When it comes to audio branding, music’s usually thought of as the product  – and the audience is just a passive consumer. You can listen to a song and let its melody carry you through the highs and lows, but no matter how many times you listen, those highs and lows aren’t ever going to change. The song is the song, and changing the mood a soundtrack sets usually just means switching to a different song. Dynamic music, however, seeks to reinvent that relationship by enabling a single audio track to evolve and reflect each individual listener, whether it’s by matching your walking pace, or detecting and following the rhythm of your heartbeat or breathing rate, or even measuring changes in your brain activity. Slow and thoughtful, lively and upbeat or quick and energetic, dynamic music allows a song to remain instantly recognizable while engaging us on a surprisingly personal level.

Just check out this video demonstration of Weav Music’s exercise app Weav Run, which won the 2019 International Sound Award for Service and Sound start-ups:

https://www.international-sound-awards.com/media/ISA2019/2019-1014-Weav-Music_presentation_Rasmussen_KB.mp4

As you can see, it’s not just about speeding up or slowing down the music: there’s a very tricky balancing act to consider between the pitch, tempo and even the composition of the song so that it remains appealing – and recognizable – in a variety of forms. Managing those sorts of second-by-second changes, and doing it so quickly that the listener doesn’t even notice it’s happening, is a pretty new development that’s gotten a really big push from smartphones, mobile devices and our always connected, on-the-go world.

Still, the idea of it has been around for quite a while: just think of an opera, where a whole orchestra’s focused on just keeping pace with the action on the stage. But the idea of doing this automatically and in real time, for each and every person, really got its start with early computer games, where programmers had to come up with some very inventive audio techniques to allow the music to seamlessly shift from one situation to the next. Here’s an example of one such technique called vertical re-orchestration that uses hidden bridges to move back and forth between slightly different versions of a single melody:

If you think about it, video games are really all about influencing a person’s behavior and creating an immersive, dynamic environment that draws them into the experience, which is just the sort of engagement that audio branding seeks to create as well. As the intersection between technology, art and lifestyle continues to expand, that sort of approach is becoming more and more relevant, not just in virtual environments but in our everyday lives as well. For instance, Sync Project, a Boston audio startup acquired by Bose in 2018, has been developing technology that adapts music to a listener’s real-time biometric data to help them relax, to fall asleep, even manage chronic pain and other medical conditions:

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2127759-start-up-uses-biometrics-to-tailor-music-for-good-nights-sleep/

If you’d like to see how it works, give it a try here:

https://unwind.syncproject.co/#/

Music can have a very real, even medical impact on our brains and bodies. Just listening to a favorite song can trigger the release of endorphins in much the same way exercise does, and releases neurochemicals such as dopamine and oxytocin, promoting a sense of well-being and reward and actually blocking pain receptors to reduce stress. This effect is so potent that music therapy is currently being researched as an alternative to opioid prescriptions. The potential for dynamic music to utilize and finely tune this effect for each listener could have enormous implications for everything from audio marketing to the entertainment industry to healthcare.

Audio technology’s evolving at an unprecedented rate, and in ways we hardly could have considered a decade or two ago. Today we can go jogging with the Weav Run app and, instead of simply keeping up with the music, the music itself keeps up with us, changing and flowing to reflect our own experience in the moment. We’re entering an era in which listeners no longer simply listen to and consume music, but engage with that music on a physical, personal level, weaving it more and more deeply into the fabric of our lives.

Would you consider reviewing the Audio Branding Podcast?  If so, here’s the Apple Podcast link: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/audio-branding/id1489042453  And if you like what you hear (and read!) – please do share it with anyone you think might be interested. Thanks so much!

And if you’re interested in crafting an audio brand for your business, why not check out my FREE download – 5 Tips For Implementing An Intentional Audio Strategy at https://voiceoversandvocals.com/audio-branding-strategy/

Filed Under: Music Tagged With: audio branding, biometrics, dynamic music, dynamic sound, healing music, music composing, music composition, sound healing

Interview with Co-founder and CXO of Audio UX, Eric Seay – Part 2

November 4, 2020 by Jodi Krangle

This is the second part of my interview with Eric Seay. We dive into more about how audio varies for different brands. Eric also walks us through his entire process for creating an audio brand. This second part of our conversation is just as intriguing as the first and I can’t wait for you to dive in!

In this episode, we explore:

  • How to create audio branding for a company that just has a feel
  • The different phases of developing an audio brand
  • How many companies and brands have thought about their audio branding
  • How audio branding has become more normalized
  • The background needed before writing the actual audio
  • How Audio UX decides what each brand needs for their audio branding
  • What Eric does with each brand
  • How psychoacoustics comes into play
  • Best practices for sounds
  • Universal sounds versus location specific
  • Generic sets (sounds) versus Premium sets (sounds) and how that drives sales
  • Sounds creating experiences
  • Where UX came from and the importance of the user experience
  • Working with the UX teams with each brand
  • The new platform for audio branding
  • Having apps work together with their audio
  • The parts of different experiences that should have differences with audio
  • Making sure everything sounds the way it should once everything has been created
  • How audio branding has changed
  • The need for comfort with sounds now with COVID
  • Sound types and their unique skills in different apps/devices
  • How sound affects what we want
  • The evolution of audio branding with each brand
  • Check out the case studies on the website

The best way to contact Eric Seay and AudioUX is through their website at https://auxnyc.com/. You can find AudioUX on more social media platforms @aux_nyc (Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter).

 

This episode was very skillfully made to sound beautiful by the talented Humberto Franco (http://www.humbertofranco.com/).

Would you consider reviewing the Audio Branding Podcast?  If so, here’s the Apple Podcast link: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/audio-branding/id1489042453  And if you like what you hear (and read!) – please do share it with anyone you think might be interested. Thanks so much!

And if you’re interested in crafting an audio brand for your business, why not check out my FREE download – 5 Tips For Implementing An Intentional Audio Strategy at https://voiceoversandvocals.com/audio-branding-strategy/

Filed Under: Audio Branding Tagged With: audio brand, audio branding, audio branding evolution, audio experience, AudioUX, branding background, comfort sounds, generic sounds, location specific sounds, phases of development, premium sounds, psychoacoustics, universal sounds, user experience

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