Eartheater breaking real glass with her voice required research & rehearsal. Factors included glass temperature, size, shape, age, pitch & physical stamina. No special FX used: captured all in camera at 1000+ fps.
This is a random tip, but if you want a deeper voice but are having trouble with consistently keeping it low when you're speaking, check that you aren't subconsciously tensing your throat. This especially goes for those who have trouble speaking (such as semi-verbal folk) who may have learned to ignore the amount of effort they put into speaking.
This is a little complicated, so I'm going to heavily simplify things, but. The pitch of your voice depends on your vocal cords, which are located in your throat. Tensing your throat also causes those vocal cords to tense up, which means your voice comes out higher. Relaxing your throat does the opposite, which makes your voice come out deeper. You don't need to teach yourself to keep your voice low, you just need to teach yourself to keep your throat relaxed, and your body will naturally lower your voice. (And if you want a higher voice, just switch it around and tense up your throat!) It can take a while to get used to, and may even feel like you're straining your voice at first, but rest assured, it's merely due to your body being unused to the practice, just like all other vocal practices beyond what a person typically does. Just don't purposefully strain your voice/hurt your throat by trying to force anything; voice training such as this can be uncomfortable at first, as it is unfamiliar, but it shouldn't become a source of pain. Remember to drink water frequently when first making this a habit to help your throat adjust, and you should be fine.
This has been random voice tips from *checks credentials* some random plural who takes voice lessons. Hope this helps someone out there.
I was looking for something and saw that the novel mentions what Monkey sounds like:
And his voice resounded like bells and [stone] chimes (Wu & Yu, 2012, vol. 1, p. 152).
... 聲音響喨如鐘磬。
Since he's a celestial being, it would be interesting if his voice sounded like someone rubbing their fingers around the rims of wine glasses (i.e. glass harp).
Source:
Wu, C., & Yu, A. C. (2012). The Journey to the West (Vols. 1-4) (Rev. ed.). Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press.
What do you imagine Buttons' voice sounding like? I can't not picture him just.. sounding like Tom Cardy, but I'm really curious if he sounds a certain way in your head!
This is a question often asked! He's actually been voiced before for our Fallout 4 mod, by @voicesbyzane !
So yknow... like that:
youtube
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I keep wanting to practice 3D animation to the mod lines but I can't seem to find the time for it. :')