I sound like complete shit; monotone, a tendency to mumbling, and mispronouncing letters. I've been practicing by reading textbooks into a mic with pretty much no improvement.
Is it even possible to "fix" your voice or is it just one of those things you just have to live with?
Speak from your diaphragm, project your voice, and speak succinctly
Gavin Peterson
Is posting a vocaroo recording a good way to tell if your voice is shit or good?
Michael Davis
push out your throat and do a sort of silent wheeze. you can do this constantly and not look autistic. deepens your voice after about a week or two if you do it constantly.
Logan Thomas
>Asuka
Shit taste.
Jose Powell
Read poetry out loud, learn the flow and bounce of the words, getting your own cadence comes with practice and punctual pronunciation, padre.
Kevin Myers
>Reading from a textbook >Expecting it to help with a monotone
You're not objective OP. Whenver I hear myself talking I want to die,but there's couple of women claiming I can inseminate them with nothing but conversation Ask your friends if situation is really that bad, probably it's not
This. Conversation is brain-dead easy for about 80% of women. Even if you sound super fake they love the attention
Alexander Price
brehs, I'm already on trt. Should I inject myself with tren to get dat der voice gains?
Noah Roberts
Taking singing lessons. I did. Great way to learn how to use your voice.
Carson Cox
vocaroo.com/i/s1bmOvPiZjKy Pronunciation of R has gotten a bit better, voice is still bad Why would you assume I'm doing this to talk to some brain-dead thots? I just want to sound better.
>vocaroo.com/i/s1bmOvPiZjKy Your accent is fine, for pronunciation just do what said. It's not nearly as bad as you think it is, just be happy you arent a squeaker
Carson Myers
I sing a lot.
Ryan Ward
youtube.com/watch?v=SjuZq-8PUw0 Listen to the way Kenneth says the famous Shakespeare quote. He Is clear, concise, and easily understood but the inflection, the cadence, and the emotion brings the understanding of what is said to a level far beyond reading objective facts off of a textbook. Practicing with poetry, with its repeating sounds, rhyming, alliteration, parallelisms, etc, is the best practice possible.
Start with something like Robert Frost, Walt Whitman, or hell even Dr Seuss and work your way up to things like Shakespeare. Your voice in the physical sense is great for reading, and it has the potential to be warm and rich, should it be led in the right direction, that's something most people envy, good luck m8