Studio Hours are Monday thru Friday 9am to 9pm
Weekend sessions are available.

MineWurx Studio
703-293-6213
E-mail MineWurx
MineWurx Studio Rates and Services HERE
MineWurx Studio accepts MasterCard, Visa and American Express
Cost of Voice Over Lessons:
10 weeks - $800
Payable in 2 Payments of $400
Studio Services
Voice Over
Training Classes
Voice Over Demo
Production
Audio
Production Classes
Consultation Services
Home Studio
Design
Digital
Editing Classes
I started professional voice work in 1996 with my first set of
commercials for a doctor named Whitten who performed a then
relatively unknown procedure known as Lasik. The doctor went on to
bigger and better things, like performing his surgery on Tiger
Woods, after which his career exploded, as did mine and Tiger's. I
would like to accept responsibility for their success, but oddly
enough, neither has called to thank me. I then went on into
industrial narration, political and commercial work in both the New
York and Washington Baltimore markets. While in New York I attended
Broadcast School. Then I ended up back in Washington with my first
radio job working for Metro Shadow Westwood One. A few years later
I finished my recording studio, MineWurx, where I now teach new
voice talent how to break into the market and properly say the word
W.
I started my voice over training at JRB Productions, working one on
one with a voice coach for several hours a week. I continued that
training for close to two years. It was a rather conservative
coaching style. After a while I wanted more, so I moved to New York
to find out about the next level. During a brief relationship with
William Morris, I learned more about the acting and the character
work involved in voice over. While attending Broadcast School I
learned more about the internal operations of the radio and
television business, which led me to working in radio in the
Washington market. I have since left commercial radio and now work
full time in the studio.
After a decade working with studios, voice talent, producers,
agents, audio engineers and radio people, I have been fortunate
enough to gain quite a bit of experience. I have taken that
experience along with my voiceover talent, and used it to make me a
better talent in the studio as well as an all around production
guy.
I thirst for this stuff. You have to love it or there is no sense
in doing it. VO is a lifestyle, as well as a craft.
When it comes to coaching voiceover. I like to take a realistic
approach, teaching in a fashion my students can understand. After
all I'm working in voiceovers. I make no bones about sharing my
experiences and mistakes with my students so they in turn don't
make them. I'm on the phone daily with producers, listening to
their concerns. I'm holding ISDN and phone patch sessions on a
regular basis. Each day I'm sent copy from around the country and
sometimes the world. I go through the same struggles all the time
that my students will be facing. And I share those stories, along
with tenured guidance, with my students. Real voiceover training,
from a real voiceover guy. Someone who has not just been there -
but is there. When it comes to coaching, These are the things I try
my hardest to bring to the table.
I take my students on a journey through the studios, agencies and
unions. Through classes on digital audio editing and commercial
production. I consult my students on each and every aspect of the
business. I do this to prepare them for the reality of trying to
work in voice over, rather than fill them with hopes and dreams
about some mystical potential. Reason being, potential doesn't pay
bills. Yes the potential to make a lot of money is there, and after
lessons at MineWurx Studio, you will have a full understanding of
what it takes to achieve it.
It's funny, but I was going through some old documents and I came
across a letter I wrote in response to some one who asked a few
questions about getting started in voice overs. For those of you
who would like to get to know me better, I figured this served as a
good demonstration of who I am and how I like to do things. Fact is
I care. Maybe too much. It'l probably be the death of me. I just
thought it was interesting because even I was surprised by how much
time I took to write a complete stranger.
Here is the letter:
Rick, thanks for your interest, and you have some valid questions.
I think when getting started in VO, the biggest thing is the
training. All of the opportunities to do VO work will come later on
once a person is well versed in the craft. This usually takes time.
For some it takes years of practice, before they develop that
"commercial sound". Some people are hired right away for their
voice, while others have to fight a little harder to get into it.
Yes, in the real world, most voice opportunities come in the middle
of the work day.
Being a talent in the Washington/Baltimore market for years now, I
see most jobs for "the Big Stuff" (local radio, television,
narration) mostly come up during the business day. Don't let this
turn you off to the idea, because right away, these are not going
to be jobs you'll be competing for. It takes time to get to a
caliber of performance before you would be out in that market, so
don't worry about it right away.
The recommended path is start training (3 to 6 months), most of my
students stay with me a minimum of 20 weeks. Then go into the demo
phase of your plan. From conception, to recording, to post
production (printing, labeling, duplication) the process usually
takes 4 to 8 weeks. So when you lump all that together, most people
who go through the process spend 3/4 of a year getting ready to
market themselves. Even after all this, you would still be a little
green in the studio, which only goes away with exposure and
practice. All this being said, you would have some time to reflect
on your career path, and if there is a possibility you may make
some sort of life change in an effort to pursue the business.
This is the most traditional method of getting into voice work.
There are, however, some new and ever increasing opportunities to
do this work from home, as the internet and digital production are
growing every day, and a new market place for voice work is
emerging as I am writing this.
There are more jobs for voice work, offered to me daily via
internet voice banks, than the have ever been by traditional means.
I joined voice123.com a year ago, and have booked more jobs from it
doing nothing, than running all over town trying to get in front of
the producers here in D.C. Benefit: You can do the work from home,
on your schedule, and don't have to modify your current career
choice at all.
This is one of the cool things about the internet jobs that come
up. Granted most of them are low paying, non-broadcast type jobs,
there are some big national jobs that come out of it. I just
finished a big narration project the other day, and all I had to do
was pick up the phone.. I can explain that in depth at another
time.
As far as my coaching style, no two people are the same, and each
needs a different type of motivation to get with the program. I
take a very slow, methodical approach to teaching the lessons of
reading, interpretation, pacing, breathing, inflection. Each person
gets training which is fit to their own needs. There is no "cookie
cutter" approach. My lesson times are flexible. I hold most of my
sessions at night, as many of my students work like yourself, I
also set aside Thursdays, and start lessons at 9am and go to 9pm.
Sometimes I fit them in on the weekend (Sat.) if that's what it
takes. I have several different "packages" which are all paid in
advance. If a student misses a lesson, the lesson is moved up to
the next week, so there is no loss of session time. Every now and
then, I have a gig, and I might have to bump a class in order to
make it, so I ask for that flexibility in return..
Everything else about my lessons I tend to reserve for active
students, so I hope I have given you some more info. I would like
to schedule an evaluation session with you, at no cost, so I can
get a better feel for your specific needs and talents, and so that
you can get a better idea of the process and see if it is something
you would like to pursue further.
Once again, thanks for you interest, I look forward to hearing from
you. Michael Minetree MineWurx Studio 703-293-6213

