Why does my recorded voice sound different than what it sounds like when I'm talking?
anonymous
1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
Why does my recorded voice sound different than what it sounds like when I'm talking?
Four answers:
Macy
2012-08-29 21:56:26 UTC
It doesn't. You think it does but for example, If you record yourself singing, and then sing with your recorded voice, it sounds the same. Try it out(:
Saxtus
2012-08-29 21:51:06 UTC
Yeah when i first heard my voice it recorded it was way more high pitched then i heard in my head. It has something to do with vibrations causing your voice to sound different to you when you speak. When you hear you're voice recorded that's how everyone normally hears you.
Andrew
2012-08-29 21:50:16 UTC
it doesnt. you just are not used to hearing your own voice other than while you are speaking. unless you have some sort of distortion or bass/treble change in the speaker that is how you sound
anonymous
2012-08-29 22:36:04 UTC
we "hear" our own voice through the bones in our head and passages in our throat
it is not exactly the same as what others hear through the air
go in a small closed room with hard walls and speak or sing. it sounds "odd" because you hear echoes
we do no took like what we see in a mirror because a mirror reverses left and right
notice singers making a recording listen to their voices and other Instruments through earphones so they know what the audience would hear
ⓘ
This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.