Sunday, February 16, 2014

Sometime Never - AudioReview



Article author: Alwyn Ash

"This is my experiment, not yours!"

7th July 1983. Ghost hunter Nancy Timperley visits what used to be the Summervale Holiday Camp, on the East Yorkshire Coast - the location of a tragedy that took place many years earlier. Tape recorder at the ready, she calls out to the spirits, hoping for a connection with the supernatural. However, out of the darkness steps the mysterious David Voland... He is friendly, engaging, and seems to know a great deal... But what is his connection with Nancy's work? Come to think of it, just what is Nancy's connection with ghost hunting? There are mysteries to uncover...

"Sometime Never" is new ground for Spokenworld Audio, a company that has, until now, focused solely on single-voiced dramatic readings and radio documentaries. New territory perhaps, but not an unfamiliar one to award-winning writer and director Neil Gardner, whose hard work and dedication (along with his team, including partner Tanja Glittenberg) has seen an increase in productivity. And so, 2014 welcomes the first full-cast audio from Spokenworld, starring Simon Jones and Rosalyn Landor, with a thoroughly intruiging story written by Scott Harrison.

Almost half an hour in length, this is one tale that crafts an instant ear-grabber, enhanced with fabulous sound design, and music by James Dunlop. Nancy has been to Summervale before, as a child, the sole survivor of a devastating fire that caused the death of 500 people. David, however, is far from being just a passer-by, for he carries a secret that must remain hidden. Via flashback, we learn of the shocking truth, and the length someone must go to to protect their children. It is a look at morality and consequence. It does also make you think, about how we live our lives, and what defines us, and how we may be perceived. Loss plays a huge part in this story, perfectly performed by the cast.







Fans of popular sci-fi comedy series "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" (created by English writer Douglas Adams) will no doubt be familiar with Jones' work: he played lead character Arthur Dent in both the radio and television series! In addition, his career has graced both film and stage. Other work includes various voice acting and audiobooks such as "The Adventures of Sexton Blake", which originally broadcast on BBC Radio 2 in 2009. It is therefore rather delightful to find this highly-esteemed actor playing the part of David in "Sometime Never". That is the beauty of Spokenworld, casting actors of this caliber and really giving the listener something to cherish. Equally rewarding is the performance by Landor as Nancy - an award-winning audiobook narrator, this lady is known for roles including that of Helen Burns in the 1970 film adaptation of Charlotte Brontë's "Jane Eyre", as well as her being cast as Pru Standfast in British television series "C.A.T.S. Eyes", spin-off from police drama "The Gentle Touch".

Neil Gardner and James Dunlop have worked together previous to "Sometime Never" on the second series of "The Confessions of Dorian Grey", published by audio company Big Finish, in 2013. Clearly the working relationship established during this period has grown to developement of other equally as stunning projects, and we can only benefit from such a collaboration. Full-cast audios are enriched by skillful sound design and music, capturing vivid imagery that permeates the mind and senses, and Spokenworld know this all too well - Harrison's script has been brought to life in the best way possible, the perfect "calling card" for a new audience whilst pleasing regular fans too!

Gardner has been a champion of audio for over twenty-four years, with a deep passion for independent productions. He has always believed in the medium, and appreciates its qualities and diversity. After all, where else can you create kingdoms, universes and magic on a respectable budget? Sound has the ability to engage in history, culture, religion... and conflict, whether it be either personal or global. For him "Sometime Never" also signals a dream come true, as he says: "I launched Spokenworld Audio in 2010 specifically to get to a time and place where we would be able to do just this sort of thing, commission and produce our own audio drama."

With further two-person audiobooks coming in 2014, and a feature-length full-cast project in the pipeline, things are looking fantastic for the team. I, for one, cannot wait to see what develops at Spokenworld HQ over the coming months. Having recently reviewed shorts "Twin Points" and "Inside The Machine" (which precede a collection of science-fiction stories to be launched this year), I can honestly say the future of independent audio is safe in the hands of these fine people! And with past and present collaborations including such names as Nicola Bryant, Emma Darwall-Smith, Michael Fenton Stevens, Barnaby Edwards, and Debbie Chazen (along with many more yet to come), the passion for audiobooks is reaching out to a diverse public whose own tastes are as varied and appetising...

Final mention must go to Harrison, who not only engineers a well-thought out idea for "Sometime Never" but shows genius in his approach, masterfully teasing us with a plot that will not only surprise but satisfy too - with past work including projects for Big Finish such as "Blake's 7" and "The Confessions of Dorian Gray", what else can you expect?

You can obtain the audiobook of "Sometime Never" for download at
Spokenworld Audio (£3.99 ex. VAT for UK/EU)


Thursday, January 26, 2012

The (Re)Making of A Doctor Who Classic

GUEST article author: Neil Gardner


"How lovely it is when the actor recognises that you, as producer, have an equal role in creating the product... makes you feel included somehow..."

A few weeks ago, across a 3-day weekend, I teased many people on Twitter and Facebook that I was off to deepest, darkest Oxfordshire to record a major new Doctor Who audiobook for the lovely folk at AudioGO. What I didn't (and couldn't) say at the time was WHICH DW classic I was producing and WHO the reader was. Well, friends, the muzzle has been removed and I can tell you everything.

As any good Doctor Who fan knows, back in the 1980s there were occasional problems that hit the show, one of the biggest was a strike by the electricians, which sadly put paid to a Tom Baker serial known to the world as SHADA. Written by the incredible Douglas Adams, the show was part filmed, but it couldn't be completed and so ended up on the BBC scrapheap. It was later revived on VHS with the existing episodes and some new Tom Baker voiceover, plus a rather nice little script book. Later still, the top chaps at Big Finish made a fantastic audio version. And in 2012, BBC Books are releasing the complete "Doctor Who: Shada... the lost adventure by Douglas Adams" as written, and completed, by top Who scribe Gareth Roberts.







When I first heard the news of this book being released, back sometime in 2011, I immediately got in touch with AudioGO DW commissioning editor Michael Stevens and BEGGED to be allowed to produce it. For so many reasons this is such an important DW book for me. First it is a key piece of Who history, second it is a key piece of Tom Baker history, third it was written by Douglas Adams (my literary hero) and fourth... well... it is such a massive release, and I am an anorak for this sort of thing!

And then, about a month ago, I got the email asking me to produce the book as audio...but there was a rider... it had to be recorded at a specific studio in the Oxfordshire countryside. Normally I get to do anything that needs recording in London, or sometimes Manchester or Birmingham. So why this studio I'd not heard of in the lovely countryside? Hmmm. OK, so I rang the studio, got it booked and sorted...we would have to record over a Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday as the reader only had those 4 days free. Fine and dandy. "So who is reading it?" Mickie the studio owner asked. Good question.

The next email arrived from AudioGO and you had to pick my jaw up off the floor. The reader was going to be, none other than the Lady Romana herself... LALLA WARD! Aaarggh, uurgh, oooooh. Lalla Ward... alongside Lis Sladen, she was MY companion, and even more exciting she was the companion of MY Doctor. Well, blimey. This job was turning out to be better and better.

Admittedly the thought of a 2.5hr journey from Croydon, through rush hour traffic to Oxfordshire... and then back again in the evening, didn't thrill me. But this was ROMANA! Reading SHADA! Not only had she been Mrs Tom Baker, but she had been close friends with Douglas Adams. What an opportunity to meet and work with such an influential character in my life.







So that was that. The job was on. I had the hefty script (almost 500 pages long) and a week or so until the recording. "Oh, Neil," comes the email from Michael, "could you call Lalla and just check everything is OK with her and the script?" Er...... CALL LALLA WARD?! Aaaaaaaargrgghhggghhhghg (I see now where Douglas got some of those great alien names from... hitting random keys on the keyboard can be very creative).

I am not prone to nervousness around famous actors, we are all just doing a job and mine is to help them do theirs, and keep the gig going smoothly and technically on spec. But for some reason, just as when I first met Tom, or first worked with Lis, the idea of chatting to Lalla filled me with butterflies. But of course, she was lovely, friendly, utterly professional and a real joy to talk with. She apologised for making me come all the way up to the Oxfordshire countryside, but explained that she had used that studio a lot recording other audiobooks and that she was due to fly off on a trip the day after recording ended, so being near to home was important. How lovely it is when the actor recognises that you, as producer, have an equal role in creating the product... makes you feel included somehow.

And so the fateful morning arrived. I was up at 5am and put together my kit - iPad with pdf script, additional lines to record for promo stuff, USB stick x 5 plus portable hard drive, a load of medicine (since I was rather under the weather at the time), mobile phones, wallet & money for petrol, and the must-have Sat-Nav. Bag bulging, hat on head, I kissed goodbye to Tanja and headed off at 6.30 to drive through Central London then head out west on the A40 and M40. Unusually for a Friday morning the traffic was clear, and I got a great run down the motorway (listening to some Doctor Who audiobooks as I went... of course!) I was soon wending my way through beautiful Oxfordshire villages, such as Woodstock. And before you knew it, I was there, parked outside this rural studio in a tiny village. Very idyllic, and very unusual.







"Please close the gate quickly... two very fast dogs live here" announced the garden gate. Fair enough, Lalla had warned me about the studio doggies and their love of escaping into the fields. And then, before I knew it, I was inside this beautiful country cottage, a grinning Mickie and his lovely wife greeting me, and Lalla Ward surrounded by bouncy dogs, sitting with a cup of tea in the kitchen. And so began 3 days (not 4, Lalla was too good a reader to need 4 days!) of rural recording bliss. We had a lot of fun in those sessions. Tea breaks were a chance to talk about the life, universe and everything. I learned about Douglas, and Doctor Who...about Queen and dog training... and we nattered like old gossips. It was a fabulous time. It is also the only studio I've ever worked in where you have to pause every now and again because of the sound of horses clopping past outside. No matter how good your sound proofing, those hoofs make a noise!

So far, all good. Long days but lots of fun. We were all loving the book...such a brilliant piece of writing. We were racing through the script, everything was sounding good, Lalla was happy and we were all relaxed. As we came to a close on Saturday evening, we knew that we only needed 4 hours to record on Sunday to complete the job. This meant, Mickie suggested, that we could finish by 2pm and have a nice country pub roast lunch together. Oooh, now THAT sounded nice. So far we had spent Friday and Saturday lunchtimes in the nearby pub, enjoying some extremely tasty food...and having a great laugh swapping various life stories. But a Sunday lunch with Lalla Ward, now that would be special for a Whovian. I asked if Tanja could come up and join us on Sunday, which was received with a wonderful warmth and excitement.







And then Lalla dropped the bomb... she would, hopefully, be bringing her husband along for the recording AND for lunch. Her husband. Richard. RICHARD DAWKINS! He is my real-life hero. Away from characters in books and film, and those incredible people who work in the emergency services (and who should, in my opinion be given massive pay rises and/or tax breaks), Richard Dawkins is the person I have always most wanted to meet. As an atheist and secularist he is, of course, incredibly important to me as a writer, thinker and exponent of free thought and questioning the status quo. But away from the controversial side of life, his work as an evolutionary biologist, academic, teacher and author has inspired me, educated me and illuminated my life. Yes, I am a Richard Dawkins fan... I just wished I had my old "Richard Dawkins is my God" t-shirt to wear!

And so came along one of those days in your life that you just can't quite believe is happening. Tanja and I arrived at the studio early morning, and there was Lalla, and in steps Richard with their own cute little dog. Yes, I was in awe for a moment. But we quickly got to work, and 4 hrs of recording later it was time for our lunch.

At the pub I sat next to Richard and had a wonderful chat about biology, evolution, religion, TV, audiobooks, Doctor Who... never have I felt (a) so much like a pig in doodah and (b) so woefully uneducated... the man is a behemoth in the brains department. Everyone at the table, including Mickie and his wife and daughter, Tanja and Lalla, joined in the free flowing conversation. And the roast dinner was a bit nom nom too! I even got to ask Richard the joke question I had always said to people I would ask him if I got the chance. Oh yes. I asked Richard Dawkins, evolutionary biologist, what sound does a giraffe make.......... which led to a hilarious chat about exactly what noise DOES a giraffe make, how its vocal system had evolved, etc... Pig in doodah, I am telling you... that was me!







And so, lunch finished, we headed back to the studio to complete a few final pages, take a few piccies (as seen here) and for me to get Richard to sign my copy of The God Delusion (well, I had to, didn't I?) It had been an incredible few days in the company of some fascinating people. Working with Lalla was a joy, and I hope very much to record more audio with her soon. I've already got a few ideas up my sleeve, and I also hope AudioGO will use her for some other audiobooks as well. Heading home, Tanja and I were happy smiley people, ready to tackle the editing that lay ahead of us.

And so, here we are, a couple of weeks on. The editing has been completed and all the audio files are with ace composer Simon Power for some atmos/musical magic to be added. As well as Lalla reading, and Simon's score, John Leeson has returned as the voice of K9, which really adds to the Tom Baker-era feel of the piece.  Shada is an outstanding piece of writing which Gareth can be extremely proud of (as a Tom-era Whovian I was overjoyed at how the story was completed) and I am sure that you will enjoy Lalla's wonderful reading of the book, and understand that creating this audiobook was a real joy and pleasure for me (and Tanja).

Isn't Doctor Who fantastic, eh?







Doctor Who: Shada the audiobook is published by AudioGO Ltd, and released on 8th March 2012 as a 10 CD set and download.