Recording the Intro to the I Ching Audiobook

Ready! I’ve got my reading glasses on!

I had such a great experience recording the first chapter of my audiobook that I had to share, and memorialize in a blog post. My publisher North Atlantic Books arranged for me to record at Live Oak Studio in Berkeley, a truly fantastic place. This is for the third book, I Ching, The Oracle.

To be standing where music legends and NYT bestselling authors once stood! ::faints::

Boyz II Men, Alicia Keys, Destiny’s Child, Vanessa Williams, En Vogue, Chaka Khan, Lenny Williams, just to name a few of the familiars, have all recorded at this studio before. Destiny’s Child recorded their very first album here! ::fangirl scream:: Instagram has this fun feature where you can tag the location, and then if you, the viewer, click on that location tag (in this case, Live Oak Studio in Berkeley), you can see everybody else’s photos tagged from that location, i.e., in this case, see all the other recording artists and authors narrating their own books sharing photos from the studio!

Now I kinda wish I had the backbone to ask if I could take some photos of the engineer’s setup, you know, that station in front of the glassed-in studio space with all the colorful levers and buttons. =) But it seemed like his space and I didn’t want to intrude. So, womp, womp, sad face, no impressive sound-engineer’s-giant-keyboard pics for my social media. (Do blogs even count as social media anymore?)

This was my first time in a recording studio,* and certainly my first time recording my voice narrating my own book. I left the experience with a lot of admiration for professional voice actors and audiobook narrators. Like the voice actor we chose for narrating the I Ching audiobook — he sounds like one of those National Geographic or History channel voiceover guys! It’s a skill, and maybe dare say even a talent.

* Technically, I’ve been in a recording studio before, with an entire symphony, as one violinist in a sea of violinists in the violin section of said symphony. But for sure this was my first time in a recording studio for totally-me reasons.

Just because you wrote the Thing doesn’t mean you can competently read the Thing aloud, especially since I would not call my writing style “conversational.” So when you read it aloud and your writing style departs from your personal “conversational” style of speaking, it comes across as awkward.

Fortunately, the sound engineer was fantastic. He coached me really well, telling me when I was speaking 10% too fast and needed to slow down, when my energy wasn’t matching my last paragraph, and flagging words that had just the most subtle stumble, or even when I was getting a bit too loud with my breathing (lol). I have confirmed that audiobook narration is not necessarily the best profession for you if you have asthma (I have asthma).

This audiobook recording experience left me with the unequivocal acknowledgement that I write very long run-on sentences. The sound engineer had to stop and teach me how to breathe. If you come to a really long sentence, even if it doesn’t have punctuation, put in breath marks as if it did have periods, otherwise you’ll run out of breath, as I did when I was reading my own damn book.

More fun tips I’ve learned: Apparently, eat a crisp apple before you start recording voice narration. I don’t know if that’s just folklore or if it’s scientifically legit, but a lot of voice actors swear by it, and believe it’s a thing. It’s supposed to help your voice be at its tip-top condition.

And don’t wear “loud” clothes while you’re recording. So for instance James was wearing a nylon jacket and sporty pants or something that goes swish swish every time he moved even a little, so he wasn’t allowed in the recording booth. Fortunately I’m a nerd who reads all the homework assignment materials ahead of time, so I knew to wear “soft, quiet” clothes.

To be a competent voice actor, you almost have to over enunciate words. So many of us lay people don’t realize that we mumble when we speak. There were several instances when the sound engineer stopped me and offered guidance on how to over-enunciate, because I was jumbling my words and it wasn’t as crisp as it could or should be.

For I Ching, The Oracle, I’ll be doing the voice narration for Chapter 1, the Introduction only. A pro audiobook narrator, Wyntner Woody, will be narrating the rest of it, speaking both the classical Chinese text of the Zhouyi and the English translation and annotations.

The Hubby (a native Beijingnese speaker) and I listened and re-listened– and re-listened– to the finalist list of audition reels. We debated, we re-listened, we looked up each one of their bios… which is to say we put a lot of heavy thought into who to choose. There were many different and competing factors for consideration, hence the debating and long deliberation time as we wracked our brains over who to go with.

For the audition, each voice actor recorded about a page or two from one of the introductory expository chapters and then recorded Hexagram 1, both the classical Chinese and the English. We (and particularly Hubby, because he’s the native standard Chinese speaker; the Mandarin I speak is not standard) ultimately went with Wyntner because of his more precise standard Chinese pronunciation.

Why didn’t I want to narrate the entirety of my own book? This is the analogy I give. Since I grew up listening to southern Taiwanese people (deep south) whose primary tongue is Minnan/Hokkien speaking Mandarin Chinese, my Mandarin pronunciation is not “standard Chinese.” If I had narrated my own I Ching book, it would be akin to listening to someone narrate Shakespeare with a heavy southern drawl. If you’re looking to voice Shakespeare, you’re looking for a particular way of pronunciation, right? Same here.

That and time constraints. I think the total was going to be something like 20 hours of straight narration, which means lord knows how many hours buffered around those core 20 to get those final 20 hours right.

Due to my full-time job, I would only be able to work weekends, and then you would have to coordinate with the studio’s schedule and available time slots. So ultimately it did not make sense for me to narrate my own book, and for the publisher to hire a pro.

Oh by the way, I learned that reading aloud 9,000 words equals about 1 hour of studio time. So the way they estimate how much studio time to book is based on word count. It’s not an exact accurate science, but ballpark more or less, 9,000 words is 1 hour of recorded audio.

Hubby, wearing “loud” clothes, and therefore banned from the recording booth.

Plus, James (the hubby) is more of an audiobook listener than I am, and he says that any time he sees that the book is narrated by the author, he skips it and won’t listen, because it has been his experience, as a consumer of audiobooks, that the author’s narration tends to be a bit too amateur to listen comfortably to for dozens of hours on end, and that you really do need a pro to do it. Voice acting is totally a skill. Not just anybody can or should be narrating audiobooks.

There are other interesting issues that come up with bilingual (even multilingual) narration. So, for example, Wyntner pronounces “I Ching” as you would in Mandarin Chinese, per pin yin, even when it’s in the context of an English sentence, whereas when the context is English, I just pronounce “I Ching” and even “yin and yang” the way a typical American would pronounce those words.

But then in other instances, mid-sentence while speaking English I’ll hop over and pronounce it as you would in Chinese. Wyntner is super consistent with his stylistic approach, whereas I, a lay speaker, am very inconsistent. Sometimes I pronounce “Tao Te Ching” the way you would in Chinese, per pin yin, and then other times, without explanation or rationale, I’ll pronounce it the way average Americans might pronounce it.

It’s a phenomenon you’ll observe — native Chinese speakers and non-Chinese expat/foreign speakers speaking Chinese will switch pronunciation midstream in English, and try to pronounce Chinese words as you would per pin yin, but Asian Americans do not. Asian Americans pronounce in the Chinese way when speaking Chinese, and then pronounce it the white people way when speaking English.

For example, when James pronounces his own Chinese surname in English, he’ll kind of give it a proper Chinese pronunciation to it. Whereas when I pronounce my own Chinese surname in English, I’ll just pronounce it the way white people might pronounce it, and don’t bother giving the proper pronunciation. But obv. will pronounce it the “right” way when I’m speaking Chinese. Or how you’ll hear Wyntner pronounce yang as “yahng,” with the soft-A like “ah,” which is correct, whereas I just go with the Americanized hard-A “yayng,” like “yay,” which is incorrect but has become normalized.

In any case, Hubby and I are both super glad we went with Wyntner, and we cannot wait for the final result to be out in the world!

James is currently proofing Wyntner’s narrations, listening to the entire audiobook, and he reports that my book is actually very, very interesting! =) Yay! James says that my I Ching book is so interesting to listen to that he even paused between sections to go look stuff up and read more on the history! I’ve earned myself a new fan, in the form of Hubby! =D [I mean, it’s not like he read a single page of Holistic Tarot or The Tao of Craft, so this is ah-mazing!]

As for the I Ching audiobook, it is going to be significantly different from the printed book, for many reasons. One, the audiobook omits all the exercises (basically the whole “grimoire” part of the book), the entire divination how-to section (so the audiobook has nothing in there that teaches you how to do the divination procedure, whereas the printed book dedicates a big whopping chapter to all the ways), and any passages that reference tables, charts, or images had to go, or be rewritten so that you’re not making references to phantom visuals.

My justification for omitting the how-to-actually-do-an-I-Ching-divination chapter from the audiobook version is (1) I couldn’t get it to make sense as pure audio, because you can’t see anything, which is why the printed book was chock full of photos and diagrams, and (2) I have free I Ching divination tutorial videos on my YouTube channel; such tutorials make more sense as videos than as audio-only. And most of the “grimoire” parts are already up on this website as downloadable supplemental worksheets.

The I Ching audiobook’s purpose, as I see it, is to hear the classical Chinese recitations of the hexagram verses side by side with the English translation and then my annotations. The chapters that cover the history, mythology, and cultural lore of the I Ching also makes sense as an audiobook. But the more practical hands-on elements, I feel, need to be either in printed book form, with the written instructions plus illustrative images, or as a video tutorial.

Also, the audiobook does not include any of the end notes. In a few select instances, Wyntner recommended that he include a few additional statements to integrate some of what I wrote in the end notes, as he felt the explanatory material in the end notes would help provide clarity to the text, and we agreed.

I rewrote a lot of the annotations and commentaries to the Zhouyi translations (the actual I Ching text) so it would read better as an audiobook. Also, I totally rewrote the Introduction that I narrated. About half of it stayed the same as the printed version of the Intro, but then about half of it is net new. Even two hours before heading to the recording studio I was still on my computer rewriting passages!

In any event, unlike the challenges, obstacles, and frustrations I encountered during the publisher-author collaboration phase of the print book for I Ching, I really, genuinely enjoyed my experience during the publisher-author collaboration phase for the audio book version.

20 thoughts on “Recording the Intro to the I Ching Audiobook

  1. Unknown's avatar Anonymous

    I’m a TOTAL newbie to your material and I’ve been thoroughly enjoying Holistic Tarot which I borrowed from the library. So I knew I had to follow your work online if possible. Glad to have found your blog! Voice acting is something I’m interested in so this was very cool to read. Congratulations on your work coming to fruition. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  2. hermitsmirror's avatar hermitsmirror

    I fully agree with James on authors narrating their own books—generally not nearly as good—but I also would 100% have listened to you read a book. Maybe your fiction books?! Are you still working on those? Thanks for sharing the exciting update!

    Like

    1. Haha I need a completed and published fiction book before I can narrate a fiction booK! 😀 ( :: laughs, then cries:: ) Funny enough just last night James brought this up and asked me if I ever plan on getting back into finishing my novel. I threw my blanket over my head and said, “Go away.” 😀

      Like

  3. Unknown's avatar Anonymous

    I love hearing about your experience. Your commitment to your craft is inspirational. I’m grateful you share your knowledge in such well researched and presented books. Thank you! And I do appreciate your humor here and there:)

    Like

  4. Unknown's avatar Anonymous

    What a cool experience! I have all three of your published books and refer to each of them regularly. They’re among the most-loved and well-used books on my bookshelves.

    Off topic but kinda related—have you watched the Netflix series Jentry Chau vs. the Underworld? It’s an animated series that draws on Taoist mythology / cosmology through the experiences of a Chinese-American teenager in Texas who lives with her Taoist occult-practicing great aunt. I’d love to hear your thoughts on it!

    Like

    1. Oh wow! That means so much to me!

      Ooh, no, I haven’t heard of that TV show before (TV show? cartoon? I’m going to make a mental note to myself to check this out!) but it sounds super cool and I’m grateful that these types of shows are now being made! There was almost nothing Asian American -ish on TV back when I was growing up.

      Like

      1. Unknown's avatar Anonymous

        It’s a 13 episode animated series. The voice cast, writer, director, and most of the people in the credits are Asian which is really cool. Fu talismans, I-Ching trigrams, and the bagua appear in the first episode and I immediately thought “omg Benebell needs to know about this!” 😆

        Liked by 1 person

  5. alinaroata's avatar alinaroata

    Darn!!! I was waiting so long and paying for a membership with no value to me just to learn You won’t read the book!!! I will just cancel the audiobook membership now, no need to have them debit me any longer. I am not interested in another person reading you book! I wish you sqid that a year ago though 😔

    Like

  6. Eee! This is so interesting! (Also, violin mentioned!) And definitely the pronunciation code-switching must be so tricky. I get read the riot act if I pronounce things ‘un-American’ to my family but I get slagged if I talk ‘like a Yank’ to family here in Ireland and that’s all within the same language! My mouth gets tired doing it! >_< Also I remember my first boyfriend and I used to vary the pronunciation (and the order, of course) of his surname (Yang) depending on who we were talking to as well (he was born in China and it was mainly Chinese spoken in his household.)

    What a cool and calming lighting set up too. It looks like it was such an rich and interesting experience. So process driven and hands on…how cool to get to do that with your own work! ^_^

    Like

    1. Ack I pecked out this long response on my phone, hit “Reply” but then my entire comment disappeared! Argh. I love WordPress but sometimes I really dislike WordPress. 😛

      AS I WAS SAYING (not that anybody knows except me since the comment DISAPPEARED)… yes! Violin mentioned haha! Though now that YOU mention it, gosh, I have not picked up my violin in YEARS at this point. It’s in its giant case in the corner of my living room, the case gathering dust. At the bare minimum I need to refresh that dampit humidifier thingie.

      And yeah, not only do I find myself varying my pronunciation depending on who I’m talking to, I don’t even think I’m consistent. Yang is a great example, as is Zhang, Huang, Wang, etc. It’s supposed to be closer to that “ah” sound, and sometimes I’ll do it, and other times I’ll go with the “ay” sound. Who knows why. 😛

      Hope you’ve been well! Happy holidays!

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  7. I had to lol at your photo of James in his loud clothes! I’m always so self-conscious when wearing loud clothes, I could never ^_^

    Very exciting to read your adventures in the recording booth — and so fascinating on what the sound engineer helped with and why you chose to go with a professional to record the rest (and fair enough, when you think about 9,000 words being one hour in the studio, it is daunting™).

    Like

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