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Voice recording practice

Your voice sounds different inside your head than it does to others. Recording and playing back is the fastest way to hear what you actually sound like — and to track your progress over time. TransVoice lets you record, replay, and compare sessions with pitch data attached, so you can see and hear your improvement week by week.

Tips & Best Practices

Tips for voice recording practice

  • Record the same passage weekly to create comparable before-and-after samples
  • Listen with headphones for the most accurate representation of how others hear you
  • Don't judge yourself after one recording — listen to recordings from a few weeks ago to see progress
  • Try recording in different contexts: reading, spontaneous speech, phone conversation simulation
  • Save recordings you're proud of as motivation for days when progress feels slow
  • Share anonymous recordings with the community when you're ready for outside feedback

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does my recorded voice sound different from what I hear when I speak?+

When you speak, you hear your voice through bone conduction in your skull, which adds bass. A recording captures what others actually hear — the air-conducted sound only. This is your 'real' voice.

Are my recordings private?+

Yes. Recordings stay on your device by default. You only share them if you explicitly choose to use the community feedback feature, and even then, sharing is anonymous.

How often should I compare recordings?+

Weekly comparisons work best. Daily changes are too subtle to notice, but weekly progress is usually audible after the first month of consistent practice.

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