Production
Equipment
Industry Roles
Tool and Techniques
Jargon
100

A document that will provide the correct names of cities, real people, brands, technical jargon, character voices, and foreign phrases to avoid giving a cold read

Prep Script

100

A three pinned cord used to connect audio equipment

XLR Cable

100
During a studio session this is the person who is working 'the board' or recording the session

Engineer

100

A method of recording that entails rolling back a short way into a recording, playing and then punching into record at a set point. The opposite of open recording

Punch and Roll

100

The level of the noise below the audio signal in decibels (dB). Generally considered to be the audible level of background noise in a recording, where no narration is taking place sometimes known as 'RT' or Roomtone

Noise Floor

200

The Final running time of the completed recording (including credits) as opposed to the amount of time taken to record, edit, process and upload the completed audiobook usually determining how the narrator is paid

Finished Hours

200

A sound engineering device that prepares a microphone signal to be processed by other equipment.

Pre-Amplifier

200

This person listens to your recorded audio to check it against the written manuscript for accuracy 

Proofer

200

A graphic line in the timeline that represents the position, or frame, of the material that is currently being accessed.

Playhead

200

A term related to dynamic range expressed in decibels (dB), as the difference between the typical operating level, and the maximum operating level in an audio system usually set at -3db for audiobooks sometimes know as Headroom

Peak Volume

300

Unprocessed recorded audio, and the first state of your audio files before the editing/quality control pass (QC pass) sometimes called initial recordings

Raw Audio

300

This device is an essential component of computer based audio production transforming analog signals into digital signals sometimes called a 'converter'

Interface 

300

****These are two roles: The person who is hired to produce the work and the person who has done the hiring and will listen to that recorded work for approval Sometimes know as a Producer or sometimes a Rights Holder [RH]

Prepper***

300

This device affects the dynamic range of audio making the louder and quieter parts closer to each other in level.

Compressor

300

a pair of small loudspeaker drivers worn on or around the head over a user's ears. Commonly know as 'headphones'

Cans

400

The amount of time that you are hired to work for or the amount of time that you spend recording in your booth is know as a _________

Session

400

typically used in a recording studio to reduce or eliminate popping sounds caused by the mechanical impact of fast-moving air on the diaphragm know as plosives

Pop (filter, screen or shield)

400

The person responsible for removing all distractions (such as mouth noise, heavy breaths, stomach noises, studio noises, clicks, bumps and thumps) so that the listener experiences no impediments to the absorption of the material

Editor

400

From the analog era when the track count had a hard limit on tape machines. Today it usually means writing the final mix of your song to a mono or stereo audio file.

Bounce or Bouncing Audio

400

Being asked to turn up or down 'the juice' or 'the gain' means to add remove

Volume

500

The act of re-rerecording the errors you've made or have been marked on a CRX sheet and to be inserted into the original audio files.

Pickups

500

Provides basic protection from mechanically transmitted noise. This can originate as floor vibrations or as "finger" and other handling noise on boom poles.

Shock Mount

500

The person who processes and preparers the source audio from which all copies will be produced by affecting the dynamic range through limiting, equalizing, and filtering. Sometimes referred to as a 'Post Pro'

Mastering Engineer

500

A piece of software modeled after outboard effects to add or enhance audio-related functionality in a computer program

Plugins

500

 is an interaction in which a user drags a cursor or playhead across a segment of a waveform to hear it away to quickly navigate through an audio file, and is a common feature of modern digital audio workstations and other audio editing software.

Scrubbing