Jan 15 2009
Why Every Writer Needs a Voice Recorder
Want to hear downtown Istanbul as it really is – as if you were walking along a crowded street in a bazaar at this very minute?
Click here: Instanbul’s Spice Bazaar
Did you hear the prayers being sung from the minarets, the customers haggling, the cars honking as they pushed through the narrow lanes? I made that recording with a little Olympus voice recorder during a trip to Turkey not long ago. My wife and I were walking through the Spice Bazaar in Istanbul – where locals shop – and I held the recorder inconspicuously in one hand as we strolled along because I wanted to capture the market’s wonderfully exotic sounds.
For a writer, that sort of thing can be a valuable resource. That’s why I rarely travel without my handy little voice recorder. Nor do I do interviews without it. And when I’m out walking or hiking with a project or story bouncing around in my mind, that’s why I take it with me. I can’t count the number of times I’ve recorded words and sounds that I’ve used later for articles, books and other writing projects, including my own journal.
A Perfect Traveling Companion
I often use a voice recorder when I travel to capture my own spoken notes when it’s not convenient or possible to take out a notebook and write. I can make audio notes as fast as I want and transcribe them later. I’ve caught important information that way – facts, ideas, thoughts, interesting phrases that are being said or that I’ve heard – valuable tidbits that likely would have slipped away otherwise.
I also like to record the ambient sounds of a place. I have recordings of downpours in the ruins of Tikal, street sounds in the chaos of downtown Cairo, conversations with taxi drivers in Peru and more. I often find these recordings to be even more valuable than photographs.
Interviews and Information Gathering
In the movies, you always see reporters interviewing people for information, a small notebook in one hand and a pen in another, scribbling furiously. I’ve always wondered how they can capture all the facts they need, and do it accurately. (My own experience with “notebook reporters” is that they have gotten things wrong or missed important information.)
These days, you’re more likely to see reporters with voice recorders. Follow their example. Writing in a notebook is a wonderful experience, but unless you have a Dickens-like ability to write shorthand, you’re going to miss important information when it’s coming at you fast and furious and you’re armed with only a pen.
The Stealth Factor
A small voice recorder has another thing going for it: stealth. You can hold one inconspicuously in your hand and it is far less obtrusive than a camera. In fact, it typically goes unnoticed.
If you’re really worried about being noticed, slide it into a pocket with the microphone end of it out. If even that won’t do, you can get a lapel-type microphone and keep the recorder completely hidden. Be careful, though. This starts getting into the cloak-and-dagger realm. Someone might mistake you for an exotic international spy.
My Personal Choice
Numerous voice recorders are available. Like cameras and other electronics, they have gone digital. Several brands are excellent, but my personal preference in terms of a brand of voice recorders has always been Olympus. I use the DS-2200. That model has been discontinued.
Apparently, the newer version is the Olympus DS-50. It has earned even better reviews than the one I have.
There are other recorders in the line that cost less, and I’m sure they’re perfectly acceptable. I chose a more expensive model for its features and recording quality (which is fabulous). For me, it was a business expense, so I could easily justify it.
It has been one of the best investments I’ve made in my writing career.
PS. In case you missed it, my personal choice of audio recorders is the Olympus DS-50. That’s what I’d get if I were buying one today. However, please don’t take my word for it. Research it. Go online and read the reviews. Make comparisons. But whatever you decide, get some sort of voice recorder and use it!
