Liverstealer
New Member
Whether its a one man or a two man operation isn't the interesting thing to me. For Crush (and correct me if I'm wrong), they simply use sound alike performers to emulate Crush's speech from the movie. I'm no voice actor, but the classic "surfer dude" voice seems fairly easy to recreate from a performance perspective.
Mickey however, at least to me sounds a bit more difficult to recreate with your voice alone. Wayne Allwine has passed, but for many has been the iconic voice of Mickey for quite some time. I have not heard any work from his official replacement Bret Iwan.
My question is, were either Wayne or Bret directly involved in this voice changer technology?
There is a company that specializes in synthetic voices. They can "build" a voice from pre-recorded audio to say whatever you'd want to say. Since Roger Ebert lost the ability to speak, they recreated his voice so he can still talk via his laptop computer. Below is a link to the company's website as well as an example of their "Bush-o-matic" voice processor.
http://www.cereproc.com/products/voices
http://www.idyacy.com/cgi-bin/bushomatic.cgi
Could similar technology be at play with Mickey?
Mickey however, at least to me sounds a bit more difficult to recreate with your voice alone. Wayne Allwine has passed, but for many has been the iconic voice of Mickey for quite some time. I have not heard any work from his official replacement Bret Iwan.
My question is, were either Wayne or Bret directly involved in this voice changer technology?
There is a company that specializes in synthetic voices. They can "build" a voice from pre-recorded audio to say whatever you'd want to say. Since Roger Ebert lost the ability to speak, they recreated his voice so he can still talk via his laptop computer. Below is a link to the company's website as well as an example of their "Bush-o-matic" voice processor.
http://www.cereproc.com/products/voices
http://www.idyacy.com/cgi-bin/bushomatic.cgi
Could similar technology be at play with Mickey?