Loud Enough! Please!

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Loud Enough

Please let me hear your story – Use a microphone!

Too often storytellers think they “don’t need a mic.” Believe you me, I understand:

  • not liking to be tied to a mic-on-a-stand while storytelling
  • not liking holding a mic in your hand while storytelling
  • not liking wearing wires while storytelling
  • not being comfortable with unfamiliar equipment
  • fill-in-your-own-discomfort here.

However…would you like your listeners to actually hear your story?!

“Oh, but I can project.” “Oh, but I don’t like mics.” “Oh, but this space is small enough, and I think the acoustics are all right.” “Oh, but it’s so much more intimate, and real, and better if I don’t use equipment or that amplified sound.” – Better for whom?

If nothing else, it is your responsibility to your audience to enable them to at least hear your stories – Get used to using a microphone!

We also need to learn about ourselves, our inclinations, strengths and limitations, and to be honest with ourselves…

using a mic
To be loud enough outside…

One of the things I have learned about myself as a storyteller: I have voice training, and I can project…and I do like to drop the volume of my voice – with emotion, for effect, for drama, to create tensions, etc. This is all well and good – as long as people can actually hear me! That’s a basic responsibility.

All of your skill with story shaping, with expression, with clever plots and characters, with profound messages and experiences – none of that GETS experienced, if the audience cannot hear you, or is uncomfortable (consciously or unconsciously) with straining to do so.

Learn how to use a mic.

Find someone who knows, who can teach you about: equipment options, how to use it/them, and really, how to take advantage of a mic – You can make really good sound effects with a mic! You can get really quiet for effect and really really be heard!

You owe it to yourself, to your audiences, and to your stories [that equilateral triangle of storytelling] – to be loud enough for people to hear you. That could involve serious training in voice projection, OR limiting yourself to only certain kinds of venues and events with small (and non-senior!) audiences – OR it may involve getting acquainted with equipment and techniques of sound amplification. The microphone is your friend!

Please be loud enough – you, and your listeners, and your story all deserve it!

——–

Connie Regan-Blake
Connie Regan-Blake in Boulder, CO

I have a great little system [a Portable Wireless P A System Version 2 by Florida Magic] that I purchased “pre-owned” from another storyteller. Here’s Connie Regan-Blake using my mic when she performed in Boulder, CO in September 2013 for Rocky Mountain Storytelling event – the Boulder Public Library auditorium is a relatively “intimate” performance space…but without the mic, it would have likely been a less-satisfying experience for all!

[And by the way, the 2014 Rocky Mountain Storytelling Conference, “Storytelling: Craft & Connection” is coming soon: May 2 & 3 in Denver, CO, with featured storyteller Elizabeth Ellis, and valuable workshops led by experienced tellers & teachers.  Check it out here.]

Thanks for reading – Pam

Comments

8 responses to “Loud Enough! Please!”

  1. Sue Kuentz Avatar

    So agree with you Pam. I have been in a few libraries where they don’t have a mike system and I really ended up straining my voice by the end of the day. I have since found a family member who has a portable mike system I can use in those occasions. My student storytellers LOVE to use a mike – gives them that voice behind a voice feeling – very empowering.
    Enjoying your posts!

    sue kuentz

    1. Pam Faro Avatar
      Pam Faro

      Thanks, Sue, for adding 2 important points here: your own voice care, and empowering students. 🙂

  2. Susan Scott Avatar

    Thanks Pam – there is nothing more irritating than listening to someone who cannot project their voice. The listener wants to hear, comfortably, so that the story can be enjoyed. The TED speakers seem comfortable enough .. it’s as if the mikes are not even there.
    Thank you for this informative post.
    Garden of Eden Blog

    1. Pam Faro Avatar
      Pam Faro

      Exactly, Susan – if they cannot hear, pretty much the whole point is lost! And whether it’s a mic you can wear and “act normal” in, or one you have to learn how to use standing or hand-held mic), it’s all doable – and so beneficial (often a simple necessity) for the listeners. Thanks for your comment.

  3. Mary Grace Ketner Avatar

    I have found especially that senior listeners appreciate every little bit of help you can provide, even in a small and quiet space with good acoustics. Recently in a room not 20X40, I bet, a gentleman asked me to “stand closer” so that he could hear. There was no mic, and–one one have thought–no need for one, but he had essentially missed the whole first story! I did move over to stand right beside him, but I felt sad about having taken people’s hearing for granted.

    1. Pam Faro Avatar
      Pam Faro

      It’s so easy to do (taking that for granted) – and perhaps the trick/responsibility is to “put on our big-girl-or-boy pants” and learn how to use a mic so that THAT just becomes easy! 😉 And you’re so right about especially with seniors. Thanks for your comment!

  4. Carole Danby Avatar
    Carole Danby

    Dear Pam

    I couldn’t agree with you more! liturgies, performances, workshops or storytelling presentations all require that the AUDIence actually hear what is being spoken. Make it a ‘good’ microphone because crackling or other interference can also be distracting and annoying!
    Enjoying reading all your blogs – such wisdom and experience. Thank you. Carole

    1. Pam Faro Avatar
      Pam Faro

      Oh, Carole, that’s so important! – To have a “good” mic/system. In those cases when the system is behaving horribly, most of the time I think it’s then BETTER to forego the mic, and make do! Sigh! Thanks so much for “stopping by,” Carole!

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