In all the cases of recording narrations for videos I have been involved with the picture was not involved. Often there is no picture edit at this point anyway. It is about the script mainly. It is usually good for the director to be present while the read is being done. They are more experienced than you at ensuring they do it the right way etc..Sometimes they send me the script before hand. I often send it on to the voice over person before they get there. That can help a lot. Also print it out as well and do it in a larger font so they can see it easily. You will get a feel for the obvious blocks in the voice over. Often the script is written that way as well.
Consider the voice over in blocks and treat them as such. The voice over person should start each block well, rise up and come back down pitch wise by the end of the block.
Video editors also have the option of cutting or splitting the voice over up and moving them around on the vision timeline. This is what tends to happen in real world situations. They may use several blocks as they are but that will only happen if that is working well timing wise with the vision.
The most important thing you have to do is get a great vocal voice over sound. Get them reasonably close to the mic. Use a pop filter to eliminate pops. Make sure you edit the voice nicely afterwards by removing unwanted sounds, lowering breaths
(but not necessarily removing them) and ensuring all phrases are roughly the same level all the way through. Make sure you end up with quiet in between voice over phrases etc. You want very little room tone behind the voice over so if the video editor does cut them up you wont hear it.
(A downward expander setup the right way can be invaluable for this) VU meters are excellent for vocal recording. That is what they were originally invented for in the first place.
A larger format high quality condenser microphone is a good choice.
(sorry but an SM58 wont cut it!) Check your HPF settings on the mic if they are available. Deep subsonic material can creep in if you are not careful. I usually set the Mic to 75 Hz HPF.
(be careful here as it is possible to take bass out of a deep male read if you are over enthusiastic with the HPF) You can record without a HPF but you may need to run a steep slope HPF set at 50 Hz or so over the whole voice over after the recording for the final bounce.
You don't have to do much processing either although some tasteful EQ and slight compression can help in the final delivery. Don't add any reverb or time based effects, people won't appreciate it.
The times where the vision was involved was for either ADR or doing voice overs to animations but that is another story.
It may be important to do this at a 48K sample rate as this is often the standard that is used in TV production. 16 Bit is adequate for voice overs as well.
post edited by Jeff Evans - 2013/01/28 17:06:58