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🎙️ Voiceover Artist in Duntocher, West Dunbartonshire

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About Voiceover Artists

A voiceover artist records professional audio for commercials, corporate videos, explainer content, documentaries, gaming, animation and more.

Whether you need a warm and friendly narrator, a punchy promo voice or a character performance, a good voiceover artist brings your script to life from a professional home studio.

A local voiceover artist who understands your audience and can deliver clean, edited audio files on a fast turnaround is a real asset for any business producing video or audio content.

About Duntocher

Duntocher is a village on the lower slopes of the Kilpatrick Hills, about two miles north of the River Clyde and immediately west of Clydebank.

The village sits on the line of the Antonine Wall and the remains of a Roman fortlet and the wall's defensive ditch are visible in the area. The Duntocher Burn runs through the village and down to the Clyde.

Duntocher developed as a small industrial village - cotton spinning and bleaching were important local trades - and today it has a residential character, with a primary school, a church and a small number of shops.

The Kilpatrick Hills rise steeply behind the village, providing walking and hill-running routes with views over the Clyde estuary. Bus services connect Duntocher to Clydebank and Glasgow.

About West Dunbartonshire

West Dunbartonshire coat of arms(opens in new tab)

West Dunbartonshire is a council area on the north bank of the River Clyde, stretching from the western edge of Glasgow at Clydebank through Dumbarton to the southern tip of Loch Lomond at Balloch.

The area has a proud industrial heritage shaped by shipbuilding, engineering and manufacturing. Clydebank was one of the great shipbuilding towns of the world - the Cunard liners Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth 2 were built in John Brown's shipyard - and the town bore devastating damage during the Clydebank Blitz of March 1941, one of the most destructive bombing raids on any British town during the Second World War.

Dumbarton, the administrative centre, sits at the confluence of the River Leven and the Clyde, overlooked by Dumbarton Rock and its ancient castle - a volcanic plug fortress that has been a stronghold since at least the fifth century and served as the capital of the medieval Kingdom of Strathclyde.

The Vale of Leven - Alexandria, Bonhill, Renton and Jamestown - runs north along the River Leven to Balloch, the gateway to Loch Lomond. The area is well connected by rail, with services from Balloch, Dumbarton and Clydebank reaching Glasgow Queen Street and Glasgow Central in 30 minutes or less and the A82 providing the main road route to Loch Lomond and the Highlands.

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