Publikation: Speaking for the Soviet land : Voice and mediated communities in the age of early broadcast
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Recorded and electronically synthesized voices are technically produced in such a way that listeners get the impression of authentic human voices. However, it would be a mistake to assume that mediated voices have the same acoustic and social properties as natural voices. In designing an appropriate voice for broadcast, sound directors have to recreate everything that an ordinary voice displays. This encompasses relations between pitch and gender (vocal folds of men are longer and their voices are lower than those of women), timbre and life style (a rough voice allows to identify a habitual smoker), amplitude and social status (authorities do not exert themselves to speak louder in order to be heard), breath and mood (controlled breathing is at odds with an erotic mood, which is characterized by a release and yielding), etc. The article has to show that the rules for the voice design that were implemented in the Soviet/Post-Soviet radio and sound film production, differed fundamentally from the rules used by that time in British and German broadcasts.
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ZAKHARINE, Dmitri, 2016. Speaking for the Soviet land : Voice and mediated communities in the age of early broadcast. In: Russian Journal of Communication. 2016, 8(2), pp. 168-182. ISSN 1940-9419. eISSN 1940-9427. Available under: doi: 10.1080/19409419.2016.1188610BibTex
@article{Zakharine2016Speak-34895, year={2016}, doi={10.1080/19409419.2016.1188610}, title={Speaking for the Soviet land : Voice and mediated communities in the age of early broadcast}, url={http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19409419.2016.1188610}, number={2}, volume={8}, issn={1940-9419}, journal={Russian Journal of Communication}, pages={168--182}, author={Zakharine, Dmitri} }
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