I am sure I can upgrade or compensate with Audacity any deficiencies in the resultant narration tracks. The novel I’m working on will have to be completely re-done on the narrative side if I am forced to go in that direction. If I use Morphvox or Voxal I can do the whole narrative track in those programs, but then will have to import the resulting narrative track into Audacity for the music and sound effects which are rendered from separate tracks. I have a number of plug-ins I bought from RX, progressing from their “Elements” to the next up from that, but there’s nothing there actually marked out as vocal modulations. I’d like to do them myself as well as other voices, but not having much to work with in that regard other than the pitch control in Audacity. Like the others it involves music, sound effects, sometimes other female voices which I have to splice in later and I haven’t always like the readings I’ve gotten from them. I have completed two audiobooks already and am now halfway through a third. (So far, no one over there at ACX has given me an explanation for this) I have always used the ACX check plugin and have passed everything through that before moving it into a separate MP3 Converter called fre.ac which ACX encourages everyone to use, even though Audacity has the capability built in to export files as MP3. It’s fine for regular narration, but not for character voices without various modulations that don’t seem to be available or defined in Audacity. I bought both Morphvox ( ) and Voxal (NCH Software) and the problem I’m facing now is that half of my latest audiobook is complete in Audacity, but I don’t like the sound of my own voice with changed pitch for female characters.
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