Writers Only Have To Know These 5 Basic Voices - Jack Grapes

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  • Опубликовано: 5 апр 2021
  • Jack Grapes is an award-winning poet, playwright, actor, teacher, and the editor and publisher of ONTHEBUS, one of the top literary journals in the country. He has won several publishing grants and Fellowships in Literature from the National Endowment for the Arts. He's also received nine Artist-in- Residence Grants from the California Arts Council to teach writing in various schools throughout Los Angeles. He is the author of 13 books of poetry, including TREES, COFFEE, AND THE EYES OF DEER, and BREAKING DOWN THE SURFACE OF THE WORLD. A spoken-word CD, Pretend, was recently issued by DePaul University. He is also author of a chapbook of poems and paintings titled AND THE RUNNING FORM, NAKED, BLAKE. His most recent publication is LUCKY FINDS, a boxed set of 50 cards that extend and parody the dynamic artistic productions of high-modernist poets such as Ezra Pound and Charles Olson. For more information on Jack's classes, please visit: jackgrapes.com/classesgeneral...
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Комментарии • 380

  • @katevenhorst1723
    @katevenhorst1723 2 года назад +407

    1) Straight Talk: Chit-chat.
    2) Poetic style: Metaphors/ similes
    3) Repetition: Biblical repetition (3xs), rhythmic beat of the story
    4) Non-communicative language: stream of conscious, non-linear way of speaking (akin to modern art)
    5) Your own voice.

    • @ErinLAnderson
      @ErinLAnderson 2 года назад +7

      Is a deep voice considered your own voice?

    • @mf--
      @mf-- 2 года назад +13

      @@ErinLAnderson In the full interview, he explains a bit that the deep voice is from a writer's self reflected feeling / true self. He guides the interviewer there briefly and it is quite powerful. Witnessing her journey there makes it plain to see that once a person places themselves in that mental state, that anything they write will be different from the other voices.

    • @SuperKittyPogoDance
      @SuperKittyPogoDance 2 года назад +4

      Thank you for the cliff notes version!

    • @anxietyrecoverycom
      @anxietyrecoverycom 2 года назад +2

      Does the deep voice fit into this 5 basic voices he mentions here?

    • @smtrm212
      @smtrm212 2 года назад

      I always thought there is something more .

  • @anavonrebeur6121
    @anavonrebeur6121 2 года назад +311

    The 5 voices :
    Chitchat ,coloquial , casual
    Poétic, ornate and metaphoric
    Repest things three times like preachers
    Non communicative writing , non linear, Inside abstract thinking..(drunk, mád, senile)
    Your own voice .

    • @martinvanburen4578
      @martinvanburen4578 2 года назад +6

      It's all in my book called, "Talk Write: Beginners" it's got 3 styles: funny voice, serious voice and semi-funny/semi-serious ....all books use these three voices

    • @anameyoucantremember
      @anameyoucantremember 2 года назад +6

      Thank you for this. You saved me 15 minutes of my life that I just wasted thinking about how to thank you for saving me 15 minutes of my life. Oh, and btw...

    • @actionsteps4909
      @actionsteps4909 2 года назад +1

      @@anameyoucantremember Now that you have the outline, can you execute the concepts? That's what the teacher is for. 'Splaining things.

    • @ElieSanhDucos0
      @ElieSanhDucos0 2 года назад

      The repetition is more of a style figure ... Ton describe this voice I would have say its the rythmic voice. Then you Can include poetry , rap, répétition, , staccato... Céline used thé rythmic voice a lot

    • @misterbonzoid5623
      @misterbonzoid5623 2 года назад +2

      'A latta crap an a cyanvas'.

  • @_abracadabra
    @_abracadabra 2 года назад +95

    1. The author's voice
    2. Casual, conversational, mundane, chit-chatty
    3. Flowery, ornate, poetic
    4. Incantatory, rhetorical, spellbinding via repetition
    5. Stream of consciousness
    What a cool framework. I'm going to play with the dice exercise. Thanks for posting this interview.

    • @ladybird491
      @ladybird491 2 года назад

      Flowery and ornate is not apart of every piece writing style, not mine. Not every poet uses adjectives through their work or alot of words nor have thickly coated lines. It is quite offensive to even claim all poets do that and this is why if someone is not an expert poet like me, need to not claim they know.

  • @grammarsongs
    @grammarsongs 3 года назад +150

    "The drama is in the tonalities you switch." Which he teaches in such a easy to understand manner. Wow. Thanks FILM COURAGE.

  • @meowpacino21692
    @meowpacino21692 2 года назад +125

    One of the reasons why I had quit film school was that the professors, specifically the ones that “taught” writing were just bitter old men who failed making it in the film industry. This dude however is very intelligent, humorous and well read and it must be incredible to attend one of his lectures.

    • @Mr.Monta77
      @Mr.Monta77 Год назад +5

      I disagree. I don’t care much for his bombastic style nor for his self-advertising. He is knowledgeable but I read him as of average intelligence. Very intelligent people communicate in a different style in my experience, usually more confident but also more humble about the limits of their own understanding about their field of study. This guy is more a primary school teacher than an intellectual scientist.

    • @TIm_Bugge
      @TIm_Bugge Год назад

      @@Mr.Monta77 To what does his level of intelligence matter?

    • @AkamiChannel
      @AkamiChannel Год назад +13

      @@Mr.Monta77 I judge people more by the content of what they say than their style of presentation. Intelligent people do generally also have good presentation style, but there are also vapid "thinkers" who have good presentation style and nothing more. Just focus on the content of what is being said and if there are any good takeaways.

    • @corporaterobotslave400
      @corporaterobotslave400 Год назад +2

      I had similar experiences in film schools - very bitter angry old creeps who would take their frustrations out on their students. I once had a narcissistic acting professor who enjoyed making his students cry. I quit his class after about 3 sessions. I also had a screenwriting professor steal my story and then it was later made into a major picture, but there's nothing I could do about it.

    • @blablablub5970
      @blablablub5970 8 месяцев назад +1

      which movie was it?@@corporaterobotslave400

  • @Omnipusia
    @Omnipusia Год назад +29

    I love the exitment on his face when he pulled out the cards, it touched me deeply - the way he is passionate about teaching, making his students "love it" as he said

  • @maxjones503
    @maxjones503 3 года назад +293

    Glad to hear Ludwig is doing well with his music.

  • @jonc12
    @jonc12 2 года назад +34

    Such a genuine artist. You could tell by how he was showing off his cards how much pleasure he gets out of being a writer.

    • @tomorrowkiddo
      @tomorrowkiddo Год назад +1

      I agree. He's still playing.

    • @grneyefin
      @grneyefin Год назад +1

      I caught that as well. Also the way he played up the 5th symphony. Just beautiful!

  • @trevorfielding7910
    @trevorfielding7910 2 года назад +37

    This is brilliant. I'm tired of hearing the same old writing advice. Love to hear ideas like this that I've never heard before.

  • @lousy4892
    @lousy4892 2 года назад +33

    "The drama is in the tonalities." Mind blown.

  • @criticalbil1
    @criticalbil1 Год назад +9

    I was fascinated by how he spent several minutes describing *rhetoric* without using the word 'rhetoric.' 😂 The repetition he referred to is a *rhetorical device.*

  • @chumbageni1537
    @chumbageni1537 3 года назад +44

    I wasn't sure I heard him right when he casually just said "when Beethoven took my class"😁 Great way to crystallize the lesson!

  • @wattpadusergeek342
    @wattpadusergeek342 3 года назад +57

    Holy sh... This was one of those Film Courage videos that hit so hard they become responsible for completely changing how I write (there’s quite a few of those racking up 😅). Thank you for sharing this.

  • @UteChewb
    @UteChewb 3 года назад +48

    Loved the Beethoven bit. I like this guy. Great insights. Thank you, Film Courage.

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  3 года назад +7

      Thanks for watching! Look forward to sharing more clips with Jack Grapes in the upcoming weeks / months.

    • @jeffbenton6183
      @jeffbenton6183 2 года назад +1

      That Beethoven part was brilliant

  • @kokoleka808
    @kokoleka808 3 года назад +68

    We've all been taught and remember that conflict drives a storyline forward--but I must admit, I forgot that tonal dynamics is equally important in keeping the story compelling--music to one's ears as Jack vividly displayed in his analogy of teaching Beethoven how to compose.

  • @moralester
    @moralester Год назад +3

    I just love listening to masters talk about their craft with passion

  • @whitebear224
    @whitebear224 3 года назад +222

    I just love this channel. It's so underrated. These are great stuff.

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  3 года назад +18

      Much appreciated!

    • @corypierce6141
      @corypierce6141 2 года назад +1

      I realize I am quite randomly asking but do anybody know a good site to stream newly released series online ?

    • @faibabernard
      @faibabernard 2 года назад +1

      Factually Accurate ✌🏽😩✌🏽

    • @nw42
      @nw42 2 года назад +3

      Absolutely. Every single interview gives me so much to chew on.

  • @G-Blockster
    @G-Blockster 3 года назад +78

    "The Story isn't where the drama is. The drama is in the tonality, the shift in tonal dynamics." Okay? And then he explained how he helped his star student with his music composition, and then the magic clicked.

    • @SanjeevTiwari92
      @SanjeevTiwari92 2 года назад +10

      I have seen movies where every scene is dramatized to the same height and it all feels so boring. And then there are movies where filmmakers are intelligent enough to manage this tonality.

    • @DonVigaDeFierro
      @DonVigaDeFierro 2 года назад +6

      @@SanjeevTiwari92 Haha, yes. Even visual tonality can help tremendously: A black and white picture is powerful and dramatic, now a black and white picture with accents of color at times?
      Oh, that's called "The Schindler's list"...

    • @SanjeevTiwari92
      @SanjeevTiwari92 2 года назад +3

      @@DonVigaDeFierro or a black and white picture with extraordinary use of lighting and we have Cold War.

  • @afrosymphony8207
    @afrosymphony8207 3 года назад +25

    oh this is one of THE ones...straight gem, omg!! i cant believe writing and music crossed paths this way, i will try this as well in my music, if its good enough for his young student ludwig its good enough for me

  • @drjmapple5510
    @drjmapple5510 Год назад +4

    Jack needs to put his books in the ebook format. I’d pay for an ebook copy.

  • @ericb3186
    @ericb3186 3 года назад +54

    Awesome talk. A quick summary to help remember it:
    Aside from the Natural voice/Deep Voice ...
    (1) Straight talk-chit-chatty
    (2) Writerly, poetic style with metaphors and similes. Can be done in different degrees.
    (3) Repetition
    (4) Not a voice but language in a non-communicative way. Stream of consciousness, not in a linear way.

    • @martinvanburen4578
      @martinvanburen4578 2 года назад

      what about cool talk?

    • @jacksonmorganfroghin4815
      @jacksonmorganfroghin4815 2 года назад

      A good example of #4 or non linear writing would be James Joyce in his huge novel Ulysses. Some critics say this is the greatest novel ever written. I can't agree with that. It made no sense to me and anyone who says differently is insane. They're littrrl snobs. Elitists. Or they are the genius and I'm the nutjob I don't think so. On the other hand e e cummings was pretty darn something because buffalo bill's defunct, okay?. Kerouac was stream of consciousness but then his characters were all high on drugs. Salinger was always chitchatty. He seemed to appeal to shooters like Chapman and Hinckley etc. Hemingway was the greatest writer of all and bmvrry pithy.

    • @jacksonmorganfroghin4815
      @jacksonmorganfroghin4815 2 года назад

      Cool talk was Kerouac and Wallace.and occasionally Seinfeld.

    • @dionysius1b870
      @dionysius1b870 2 года назад

      @@jacksonmorganfroghin4815 what are you crazy man? James Joyce is and was always happy the greatest writer that we have ever be given on this Earth! Not only is J.J. a great nationalist( IRA) Irishman , he is the greatest writer of all time. I wonder what James would think of this trivia things??and, how old are you? Because you need to read choices Ulysses a few more times you'll get it as you get older that's the genius of his writing it's a living writing it's incredible he is the greatest.

  • @blainemarcano
    @blainemarcano 2 года назад +5

    This is especially nice because in the last minutes he actually speaks using different tonalities and I could experience a more engaging interview. 🙂

  • @kyndacee
    @kyndacee 2 года назад +1

    oh! this is why I love frank ocean & kendrick's music so much.

  • @tstyleartistry
    @tstyleartistry 2 года назад +8

    I like how Mr. Grapes made himself a dead man's teacher.

  • @tekannon7803
    @tekannon7803 2 года назад +7

    I have to admit I was soured by Mr Grapes' initial idea of... 5... voices. Okay, okay; trying to add a little humor there. Seriously, what a bombshell of writing advice. I will do everything to keep this interview alive in my head. Thank you for an excellent interview and such useful knowledge.

  • @eeman13
    @eeman13 2 года назад +7

    I wish I heard him before. He explained the tone and voice in a objective way no one has ever done that (as far as I know).

  • @Sergiopoo
    @Sergiopoo 3 года назад +30

    Wow this was so good! I love Jack's energy and the way he explains things

  • @AnyDayNow360
    @AnyDayNow360 2 года назад +5

    I love this particular history lesson. Very natural flow and interesting perspective

  • @tygerbyrn
    @tygerbyrn Год назад +1

    Drama is in the tonality. Such wisdom. Thank you.

  • @itinerantpatriot1196
    @itinerantpatriot1196 2 года назад +3

    "Using voice in a non-communicative way." Makes me think of John Lennon and I am the Walrus: "I am he as you are he as you are me and we are all together." He wrote the song lyrics after hearing about college professor's who were analyzing Beatle songs in their classrooms and assigning meaning that wasn't there. He basically said, "Let em get their heads around this." My mind went to that song right away when he talked about that. But there was a lot of helpful information here. The music analogy works for me because I used to write songs and the one's I liked best were those where I changed up the bridge or moved from one key to another midstream. I'm going to try that with my writing and see where it leads. I'm really not that good at writing fiction yet so I have to make the process fun at this stage. Maybe one day I'll get it. In the meantime I'll keep looking for helpful tips like these. Thanks for posting.

  • @victoriahabladora
    @victoriahabladora 2 года назад +2

    I loved this one, short but so useful and nicely explained, thank you!!!!

  • @DavidHinnebusch
    @DavidHinnebusch 3 года назад

    Thanks! Can't wait to see more!

  • @tenealebender7249
    @tenealebender7249 2 года назад +4

    That's a very clear explanation of the dynamics of personality that I have never heard expressed with words in an idea before.... but it's something that as a writer you connect to and say to yourself. Yes. Yes. That resonates. Good stuff.

  • @AllThingsFilm1
    @AllThingsFilm1 2 года назад +7

    I am really liking this series with Jack Grapes. His ideas and suggestions make so much sense. Now, I have to get his first book. Thanks, Film Courage!

  • @TransparentLabyrinth
    @TransparentLabyrinth 3 дня назад

    I've long thought there's a suitable analogy in writing to music composition, but could never crystallize it. This helps a lot with that.

  • @KateColors
    @KateColors 2 года назад +5

    Learning what he calls the four voices. I just write and know very little about writing. People are always telling me I should write a book because I write beautifully. I wonder if I learn about writing, would I lose what's working now. Would my writing improve? My Dad used to say, "When I [my Dad] went to college, I found the more I learned, the less I knew." By the same token, I was always with the crowd who hated abstract painting until I took up painting still lifes. I started taking the left over paint from a day's session off my palette and put it on a second canvas randomly to clean my palette and not waste paint. I did this after each session on that one canvas until that canvas was full. I started to really like the results and started painting abstracts and found I really enjoyed the process of painting them. The day came in a bookstore when a book, Painting and Understanding Abstracts by Leonard Brooks, caught my eye. My first thought was, "Oooh, don't get it,! You'll wreck what you're doing." I did buy it but didn't look at it for years; yet, I knew that I would read it eventually. It really explained why I grew to love painting abstracts which is that they happen for me organically and that I do them for myself. I have amassed a collection of books on writing and have read some. One that resonated immediately with me is, If You Want to Write: A Book About Art, Independence and Spirit by Brenda Ueland, and, I thought, "Why aren't we given this book to read in school?" I totally understand what Mr. Glass is saying here and love how he puts it all together so succinctly. He's on my list to read now. I'm in the mind of just keep writing and don't worry about knowing hyperbole, metaphor, et al. Keep writing. Thank you for sharing your wisdom.

    • @paulapierce8359
      @paulapierce8359 2 года назад

      You have to stay connected to your intuition and stat centered with your self .

  • @coffeecreateconnect
    @coffeecreateconnect Месяц назад

    I'm going to have so much fun playing with these voices, not only in writing, but in my new video series.
    I can't thank you enough for these videos. You help keep me "pen to paper" 📖✍️

  • @izzy4el
    @izzy4el 3 года назад +3

    Jack is amazing! He and Mark W. Travis are easily my two favorite guests you've interviewed, but you've had so many great ones.

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  3 года назад +2

      Thanks Izzy, this is only our second video with Jack. Much more to come.

    • @izzy4el
      @izzy4el 3 года назад +1

      @@filmcourage ❤

  • @kenlovan3931
    @kenlovan3931 2 года назад

    I really enjoyed and learned much from the dynamics of the voice, as I'm also a musician. I really like hearing Jack Grapes' explanations about his teaching. After seeing how badly my first novel was written, I knew it was time to learn more about writing, so hopefully, the second novel will be better. Thanks for sharing. Ken Lovan, Atlantic Beach, Florida.

  • @Sirenade
    @Sirenade 3 месяца назад

    Love this and all of your videos, they're so informative and educational!

  • @tstyleartistry
    @tstyleartistry 2 года назад +1

    This guy has an awesome last name. Lol.
    He's also a good guide for this art form. The knowledge he's sharing is well appreciated.

  • @CastleKingside
    @CastleKingside 2 года назад +3

    Thank you, Jack.
    Thank you to the content creator for the hard work.
    Keep it up.
    Peace.

  • @stanrix
    @stanrix 2 года назад

    That piece of music will be playing in my head all day now

  • @miketacos9034
    @miketacos9034 2 года назад

    That’s super cool, I never thought of the drama being in change of the tonalities!

  • @amartyabhattacharya5016
    @amartyabhattacharya5016 2 года назад

    Wow...brilliant. loved it. ❣️

  • @escaperoomleander1948
    @escaperoomleander1948 2 года назад +56

    "Crap on a canvas."
    *J.J. Abrams likes this.*
    *Rian Johnson loves this.*
    *Kathleen Kennedy hired someone to read this to her, didn't understand it, liked it anyway.*

    • @humbertoquadros9384
      @humbertoquadros9384 2 года назад +2

      I get what you mean, and i kinda agree with what you wanted to mean. But the way you actually wrote is incorrect. "Crap on a canvas" don't mean the artwork is bad, but it's truly nonsensical, be it on purpose or by external influence. Bad works usually are nonsensical too, but not in this specific kind, it's not a voice, just a failure.

  • @semcrdotcom
    @semcrdotcom 2 года назад +2

    Very few 15 mins videos are worth watching through. This is great stuff!

  • @dijonstreak
    @dijonstreak Год назад

    Thank YOU...SO much for this deep insight into the wonderful world of word application.....Language as an ArtForm.... Deep learning....

  • @lindanorris2455
    @lindanorris2455 2 года назад

    wonderful video! I LOVE THIS MAN!

  • @unheilbargut
    @unheilbargut Год назад +1

    I just love this man and I just burst out laughing when he talked about Ludwig taking his class. Even with a perfect German impression.
    Greetings from Germany! :)

  • @ianbauer4703
    @ianbauer4703 2 года назад +1

    Great lesson giving.

  • @shaghayegh5711
    @shaghayegh5711 Год назад

    Wow love this man❤such a great teacher

  • @yvesgomes
    @yvesgomes 2 года назад

    This guy cracks me up.

  • @nicholaselliot4626
    @nicholaselliot4626 3 года назад +14

    Dear Film Courage, I was struck by a comment from the writer of Beetlejuice. He said that although the character was very weird, it was a deeply personal movie. Could you please ask some writers if what they draw on from their inner selves to write their plots and characters makes any difference to the way they live their lives or in their relationships with spouses, families, friends. If their writing is cathartic, or they simply reach a deeper understanding of themselves that is a good thing, but do any of them take it to the next level and make changes to be better people. And please ask for specific examples, without naming names of course.
    I get a lot of inspiration from hearing writers talk about writing. Thank you to them for their generosity and to Film Courage for bringing them to me.
    Please accept my apologies for this off topic comment but it's the only avenue I have to reach you since I refuse to move from email and texting to social media. ; -(
    Nicholas Elliot

    • @talltreeyeti
      @talltreeyeti 2 года назад +2

      you've already moved to social media. youtube is social media.

  • @LesandaMooreAuthor
    @LesandaMooreAuthor 2 года назад +1

    Another awesome video. I love the example that he used with Beethoven.

  • @LoriLynnGreene
    @LoriLynnGreene 6 месяцев назад

    Great teacher!

  • @19scott54
    @19scott54 3 года назад

    Brilliant.

  • @probusexcogitatoris736
    @probusexcogitatoris736 8 месяцев назад +1

    I think there is a sixth voice. The formal voice. Purely informative and technical. Of course, one could say such a voice lacks tonality but it's still a voice writers use when writing stories.

  • @AnyDayNow360
    @AnyDayNow360 2 года назад

    Wow. What a teacher.

  • @MalachiVanHaynes
    @MalachiVanHaynes 2 года назад +2

    Ahh! Yes I would definitely take this guy's class.

  • @shadowpapito
    @shadowpapito 3 года назад

    Thanks!!!

  • @carriek7993
    @carriek7993 Год назад

    WOW! thank you!

  • @GnarledStaff
    @GnarledStaff 2 года назад +1

    This is making me think of Thom Merrilin from Wheel of Time describing how to tell a story and talking about common, low cant and High cant.
    I probably spelled all of those terms wrong but its still interesting.

  • @petrij7660
    @petrij7660 5 месяцев назад

    I thought i had an original idea when i thought that why hasn't anyone tried to combine lessons from acting into the writing process.
    I'm so happy that I found this video. It's clear he has been thinking about writing for a long time and i like his approach to put creativity at the forefront instead of structure.

  • @EdWilliams
    @EdWilliams 2 года назад

    This video gave me language to some things I was already doing (that I didn't know I was doing). This was great!

  • @Charlie-dy4ft
    @Charlie-dy4ft 2 года назад +1

    This video can teach you more about writing than a workshop in college.

  • @GiuseppeGarau
    @GiuseppeGarau 3 года назад +2

    Very good Ludwig!

  • @Roshek777
    @Roshek777 3 года назад +3

    This was awesome

  • @canonjean-mignon4985
    @canonjean-mignon4985 2 года назад

    I second this a time, times and half a time

  • @afrosymphony8207
    @afrosymphony8207 10 месяцев назад

    i comeback to this gem everyonce in a while...this time it just dawned on me that this is why social network is a masterpiece, they go back n forth between college straight talk and a more professional voice in the deposition...when timberlakes character comes in tone shifts slightly to seduction as a secondary tone. its just...insane. i'm going to dissect more of my fave movies using this system

  • @pierbover
    @pierbover 2 года назад +2

    Would be great if his books were available in ebook format!

  • @cubencis
    @cubencis 2 года назад +1

    Great clip

  • @BriceKamgang
    @BriceKamgang 2 года назад

    Thank you very much 🙏🏽

  • @zurckoni
    @zurckoni 2 года назад

    good stuff. I enjoyed this guy. thanks.

  • @JaysonCrossComedy
    @JaysonCrossComedy 3 месяца назад

    Very informative. As a boxing aficionado, I appreciate the comparison. Thank you for posting.

  • @cinemashaunnolan5047
    @cinemashaunnolan5047 3 года назад +12

    He's mashing voice with style there.

  • @christinacascadilla4473
    @christinacascadilla4473 2 года назад +54

    I’m not sure what he’s talking about is voice He’s really talking about using rhetorical devices. To me, voice is the difference in how Salinger has Holden Caulfield narrate to us, as opposed to how Nick Hornsby had the voice of his third-person narrator as it jumped between the two main charters in About a Boy. They are distinctly different. Repetition is a rhetorical device. If it was voice, then Mark Anthony in Julius Caesar and MLK would sound the same. They don’t. They just both use repetition. With Shakespeare tossing in verbal irony into Mark Anthony’s repetition. That’s why they have different voices. This clip was a little too much like an advertisement for his books. I would have liked better examples. If he’s a teacher he should have been ready with better ones. I could go on…

    • @davidmc8478
      @davidmc8478 2 года назад +3

      I agree this seems not quite right. His “type 2” seems to include a huge range of voices and styles. And repitition is clearly mixed with other styles

    • @kelalliovatti
      @kelalliovatti 2 года назад +6

      Certainly, if there's one thing I gleaned from this interview it's that the man's self-aggrandizement sure gets in the way of him teaching some basic concepts.

    • @stephaniecarrow4898
      @stephaniecarrow4898 2 года назад +2

      I agree ~ you make excellent points. He would have been clearer if at the outset he'd called it tonality and devices, or something along those lines. It seems to me that voice generally refers to either the natural voice of the writer, or of the narrator. I think you're right, that tone is a device of voice, and of storytelling, but not the same thing as voice.

    • @Nautilus1972
      @Nautilus1972 2 года назад

      You're right, voice is a person. Who is speaking? I'd call them styles. A metaphorical style, a coloquial style

    • @actionsteps4909
      @actionsteps4909 2 года назад +5

      "Voices" or "tonalities" are broader categories than rhetorical devices.
      Jack claims anything you write will fit in one of these five categories.
      Can you say the same for rhetorical devices?
      Now, let's examine your argument.
      You say Julias Ceasar and MLK would sound the same if they were both in the same voice category.
      That's like saying the timpani would sound like a triangle if they were both classified as percussion.
      And your narration example simply works outside Jack's categories.
      If you're going to criticize a system, you have to use the rules of the system.
      You can disagree with his nomenclature, but that's simply a preference.

  • @therealmogod
    @therealmogod 3 года назад +8

    He just became one of my favorite people. On my soul. He just literally explain my writin'g process that I didn't even know I possess as a artist It was when he was talking about Lincoln Beethoven and the voice. Greatness godEnergy 333

  • @Foxfire-xq5ij
    @Foxfire-xq5ij 2 года назад

    Great idea for a course on teaching writing. What I do is much different. I read a ton of different books and naturally absorb different voices and then start writing with my own voice and others combine…. Writing and reading have always been natural for me though…….

  • @PoetryInHats
    @PoetryInHats 2 года назад +4

    So...
    1. Conversational Diction
    2. Literary and Poetic Diction
    3. Rhetorical Diction
    4. Abstract Diction

  • @intelligentdesign8994
    @intelligentdesign8994 2 года назад

    Following this channel now.

  • @corporaterobotslave400
    @corporaterobotslave400 Год назад

    I can see all five of these forms in my writing; very interesting I had no idea what 'voices" I was using yet I've written two books and a few screenplays and plays and a few hundred songs.

  • @ladybird491
    @ladybird491 2 года назад

    I am a great poet with lots of success including lots of publications and publishers have said I have a distinctive voice and that I am distinguished. Voice is something that is in someone and can be a blend of voices and it can be based upon who you are and where you have come from, culture and your personality. I prefer to build my work with imagery and figurative language and maybe once in a while repeat with a certain style.

  • @AltairZielite
    @AltairZielite 3 года назад +2

    Jack reminds me of every P.E. coach i've ever had. Interviewer's voice is gorgeous!

  • @lindanorris2455
    @lindanorris2455 2 года назад

    Mr. Grapes: You are speaking of the hand carving of a 19th century Carousel Horse. When Carousel Horses were carved, the Apprentices began only sweeping the floors. It was strongly believed that sweeping up the shavings and wooden scraps would teach them better lessons than any Master Carver could. A good Apprentice would learn from the ground up. The swept up wooden shavings taught them how the neck of horse bent, how the tails curved on certain steeds, how each eye was carved into the balsa wood. They learned like you did, from the ground up! Wonderful story.

  • @brrryan2908
    @brrryan2908 2 месяца назад

    My mini epiphany: In a story, the successful conveyance of different psychology/personalities of characters may be more effectively portrayed by focusing on their "go-to" linguistic style.
    Basically: hoity toity people talk like this... salespeople talk like this... romantics talk like this... straight-shooters talk like this... the avant garde say wacky stuff like this...
    Thanks AGAIN for another highly informative video! :)

  • @joannkelly7994
    @joannkelly7994 2 года назад

    Very good and very interesting.

  • @christophermoonlightproduction
    @christophermoonlightproduction 3 года назад

    I like this guy.

  • @julieju9426
    @julieju9426 2 года назад

    I like this guy. I like this channel 👍🏾

  • @grantmalone
    @grantmalone 2 года назад

    This guy sure loves the sound of voice 5

  • @arzabael
    @arzabael 6 месяцев назад

    Oh. Wow. The Beethoven anecdote at the end. I love this guy. He’s top three material. He has a lot Gene Wilder and Mel Brooks in him too.

  • @romantra1311
    @romantra1311 2 года назад

    1:32 She was one of my teachers in college, a chill and hilarious lady

  • @ai.ai.captain
    @ai.ai.captain 3 года назад +1

    Method guy rocks🤘🏼

  • @SirThomasJames
    @SirThomasJames 2 года назад

    I heard a rumour that he puts all the cards on the floor and the kids love it

  • @dragunov815
    @dragunov815 2 года назад

    Good stuff.

  • @jimm3370
    @jimm3370 Год назад

    @9:05 'Lucky Finds' ... I read about this technique in 'The Novel' by James Michener. Which was written 30 years ago...

  • @majkus
    @majkus 2 года назад +1

    This is closer to what linguists call "registers", the different ways a speaker of the language uses it under different circumstances.

  • @davineuskens21
    @davineuskens21 10 месяцев назад

    Very interesting stuff

  • @robocomposer
    @robocomposer Месяц назад

    Categories of writing voices/tonalities:
    Poetic
    Metaphoric: Uses figurative language like metaphors and similes to create vivid imagery.
    Ornate/Belles-Lettres: Highly stylized, elegant, and sophisticated language.
    Lyrical: Flowing, melodic language often found in poetry.
    Rhetorical
    Tricolon: Repeating something three times with slight variation for emphasis.
    Anaphora: Repeating the same word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses.
    Parallelism: Using a similar grammatical structure across multiple phrases or sentences.
    Stream of Consciousness
    Non-linear: Jumping between thoughts and ideas without a clear chronological structure
    Fragmented: Disjointed sentences and phrases that mimic the randomness of thought.
    Associative: Connecting ideas through free association rather than logical progression.
    Conversational
    Colloquial: Informal, casual language that mimics natural speech patterns.
    Idiomatic: Using common expressions and turns of phrase.
    Chit-chat: Light, friendly, and unstructured dialogue.
    Formal
    Academic: Objective, impersonal tone using complex vocabulary and sentence structure.
    Legal: Precise, technical language adhering to specific conventions.
    Scientific: Dispassionate, fact-based writing focused on accuracy and clarity.
    Journalistic
    Objective: Reporting the facts without personal opinion or bias.
    Inverted Pyramid: Presenting the most important information first.
    Feature: Longer, more in-depth articles with a narrative style.
    Creative
    Experimental: Unconventional structures, syntax, and language that push boundaries.
    Avant-Garde: Highly innovative, radical, and challenging forms of expression.
    Magical Realism: Blending realistic narrative with fantastical or supernatural elements.

  • @miguellazosandoval8047
    @miguellazosandoval8047 2 года назад +1

    God, I can't believe the amazing amount of amazing material you have here! You are amazing! (did you see what I did? Hahahaha)