I was an on-air personality for an FM radio station, and I've worked doing voiceovers for multimedia, including museum installations and websites, and for interactive training modules for in-house use at government agencies such as the National Science Foundation. More recently I was the voice of a series of Charter Communications (Telephone, Cable, and Internet) radio and television commercials airing in the Midwest.
Currently I am primarily interested in voicing audiobooks and narrations. I am the voice of Vox Fabula, an online publisher of short audio fiction which is available as a podcast (www.voxfabula.com)
I've studied commercial voiceover technique with Peter Rofe at PDR Voice, Inc. in Manhattan. All my other training has been through professional experience as a voice for online training (example: the National Science Foundation), museum narration (example: the National Museum of Natural History), and website voiceovers (example: www.understandingrace.org), among others.
I have a small project studio with a control room built around a Pro Tools Digi003, Mackie HR824 monitors, and a dual 2gHz PowerMac, with various outboard processors (including an Antares AVP-1 Vocal Producer) in addition to numerous audio software plugins. A separate recording room with full Auralex acoustic sound control treatment is built around a number of instruments and microphones, of which my "go-to" for voiceover is a Shure KSM-44 condenser microphone.
In addition to my voiceover abilities, I am a composer and musician, and can provide music with my projects, either constructed from library production music or through original compositions.