Side note: the terms audiobook and audio drama aren't interchangeable - these are two different things. Audiobooks are generally one voice actor, reading out a text with little or no accompaniment, whereas audio dramas are more like radio plays, with shorter duration and a cast of multiple actors, sound effects and music, etc. No Man's Land is going to be the latter, something we haven't seen in Trek lit since the Sulu audios nearly 30 (!) years ago... I'm excited to hear it!
Audible audiobooks have DRM, so you can't burn it to a CD.
You never know. Ten years ago Stewart did two audio plays for the BBC in which he played Raymond Chandler. One paired him with Clive Swift as Alfred Hitchcock, who wanted to hire Chandler to write the script for Strangers on a Train. It was hilarious. I haven't listened to either in a while.There might be a Patrick cameo, but the dude has so much money that I doubt he wants to sit around and record an audio drama during the off-season.
Home phonograph lathes are nothing new; one was featured prominently in the 1941 Marx Bros. film, The Big Store (one of their more underrated outings, IMHO). Tony Martin is a singer and department store heir, who cuts and autographs a record for an adoring fan. (In many ways, his role is sort of a Zeppo-surrogate).Real audiophiles will take the audio output and pump it into their $1300 vinyl recorder
https://www.thesound.co.nz/home/mus...yl-records-with-this-1900-dollar-machine.html
You buried the lede a bit there, @Tuskin38 !
Guess I have to investigate Audible... since I don't generally read audiobooks, I've never used it before. Hopefully there is a way to listen to them on a PC, and it's not just strictly limited to a smartphone app or something.
I would imagine Stewart would cost more for a project like this than Ryan and Hurd put together, so this was probably a safer option while they test the market for something that’s a little new for Star Trek.I am interested in these two people, but it's also interesting that they would make an audio drama for a show starring Patrick Stewart, who's got one of the most recognizable voices in the world, and not cast Stewart. Though I assume there'll be more of these incoming. I imagine when you've got the crew together for a show, getting a few cast members for a handful of hours to record some new dialogue for a subsidiary project isn't a huge investment.
I'm not sure there's one accepted set of formal definitions. Big Finish labels anything with narration as an "audiobook", regardless of the number of cast members; they reserve "audio drama" for titles with no narration.Also, I'd quibble with the assertion that audiobooks and dramas are mutually exclusive categories.
Yup, Stewart's reportedly making a million-per-episode right now on Picard, so I don't see him lowering his asking-price anytime soon for a project like this, unless maybe some in the cast manage to sweet talk him into participating.I would imagine Stewart would cost more for a project like this than Ryan and Hurd put together, so this was probably a safer option while they test the market for something that’s a little new for Star Trek.
Yup, Stewart's reportedly making a million-per-episode right now on Picard, so I don't see him lowering his asking-price anytime soon for a project like this, unless maybe some in the cast manage to sweet talk him into participating.
At least some of the hybrid releases, which mix narration with full-cast, unnarrated scenes, are labeled “audio drama.” The Third Doctor Adventures are a case in point.I'm not sure there's one accepted set of formal definitions. Big Finish labels anything with narration as an "audiobook", regardless of the number of cast members; they reserve "audio drama" for titles with no narration.
They stopped doing that thank god. They’re proper audio dramas nowAt least some of the hybrid releases, which mix narration with full-cast, unnarrated scenes, are labeled “audio drama.” The Third Doctor Adventures are a case in point.
Huh, I missed that. While I believe that only the first series of The Third Doctor Adventures is actually hybrid, even that one has the "full cast audio drama" line on the cover. My mistake.At least some of the hybrid releases, which mix narration with full-cast, unnarrated scenes, are labeled “audio drama.” The Third Doctor Adventures are a case in point.
They stopped doing that thank god. They’re proper audio dramas now
That seems like a flaw in the writing to me, rather than something inherent in the format.BF's attempt to make their Who dramas seem like the soundtracks of TV episodes is clumsy sometimes, often having long bits of nothing but sound effects where it's very hard to understand what's supposed to be happening.
I can understand not having a taste for one or the other. I used to be a "no narration, please" snob; narration in a full-cast format just seemed like padding. If you wanted to write prose, why not just do a single-reader audiobook?And what's wrong with audio plays having narration?
This is why I’m not wild about narration in Big Finish stories specifically; despite doing professional audio drama for lo these twenty years and more, the company still struggles to produce stories that are structured toward the format and that avoid crude expository dialogue. They need to get better, not rely on a different crutch.That seems like a flaw in the writing to me, rather than something inherent in the format.
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