Sherlock Holmes Audiobook - The Noble Bachelor
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- čas přidán 30. 10. 2015
- There - I did it again. Another one of my favorite stories. Have fun with it!!
This one is dedicated to Alice vonAwesome VIP - thanks for being so patient. :-) To all the Holmesians out there - which one would you like to hear next? - Hry
As someone whose family moved everywhere with the military, I enjoy your cosmopolitan accent. That you read and record these stories at one go reminds me of my late father reading long stories to my siblings and me until our early teens. So please know that your recordings bring a smile to this listener.
Your voice is spot on, I love to listen to it at night, thank you for bringing my favorite stories to life .
Greg wagland from magpie audios has the best and smoothes voice ever I love listening to him I only listen to this guy because the do different storys
Thanks - i enjoy both - i have some of Wagland's by just looking up Holmes' stories - didn't pick him in particular. - i'll look him up now to find the rest :}
Hi - they are both good in their own way and i like both of them.
although pikewerfer's style fits this kind of story - he'd have to change his vocal style to read like, let's say, Brontë. . . :}
@@alexapenn6399 Woah - I would never dare to read Emily Brontë :-) Thanks for liking me. I will continue to do my best.
Reminded me of Alan Cumming's voice. Thank you for the upload! Enjoyed it tremendously.
What a perfect voice! Thank you for the brilliant upload.
Please don't take my criticism to heart No way could I I have done such a fine job, just as I said I can pre script it Now knowing you are German obviously Grosvenor Square would be a problem 🤣
Well done with the reading :)
Thank you! 😊😁😄
🍻
Yea!!!!! more Sherlock Holmes by you :}
The name is Aloysius in English.
I LOVE YOUR VOICE! :D
if we could trouble u for the story of 'the man with the harelip'??? pls i love ur voice
+robi blabla I got to admit this case is unknown to me..... are you sure this is the correct title??
+pikewerfer you are right. correctly translated it says: 'the man with the Twisted lip'
robi blabla Ah.... I was hoping you would be referring to that one. Yes, that is a good one :-)
Great English accent but had to stop listening as the pronunciation of so many words was appalling Surely Americans know how to pronounce Grosvenor Square that's where the US embassy has been for the last 50 years
I am not an American ;-)
@@pikewerfer I love a lot of your stuff , played a few of your games, but methinks whilst you have the saxon/celt blood f flowing neigh flooding through your veins there are a few, mainly name places that grate. So after disclaiming being American which anyone with an IQ of ten or more would do, where are your origins?
@@theoriginaljoeberg Haha... well, the easiest way to say this is I am cosmopolitan :-) I was born in Germany (and own the passport, which officially makes me a German!), grew up in California (had an option to get that passport, but declined), then lived in Wales for a while, travelled the British Isles, then went all over Europe (with a particular love for Italy and Corsica), and finally settled down in Germany when I started my little family (just a cool country all in all). As to my genes, they are indeed Germanic/Celtic/Mongolian (the last one was hard to believe, but that is what the test said - looks like I have a real Hun in my tree). As to languages, I speak a lot of them a little. My favourite language is English (it has a great flow and cadence to it, a nice melody, and is hugely expressive!), my accent is usually a mixture of all kinds of places I have lived in - and usually adapts, depending on who I am talking to :-) I am told, it is usually somewhat British, with a hint of American and German. :-) Fluently, I speak English, my German is good (or so I believe, though my wife says otherwise), my Latin is ok (my third foreign language, learned it at school and at university), and my Klingon is constantly improving (ram meqmey) :-) I also speak a little Spanish, Italian, Russian, Arabic, Japanese, etc (I travel a LOT, being part of my job, so languages just hit me all the time). Which is why I sometimes have problems with unknown words or names, because I can't remember having been there or having heard them before, and then some language just slips into my mind, and I say it. Maybe I SHOULD start preparing those audiobooks - but I kind of like the challenge of doing it spontaneous and in one go. Currently, I am learning Klingon and Korean .... not good when reading other stuff :-) Hope that answers the question :-)
@@pikewerfer No excuse for not being able to speak English A love of my life was born in Germany of Danish and West Indian parent's and raised in in UK 4 passports available .How do you pronounce Leicestershire? I'm not having a dig but would veryly6 happy to screen stuff for you. What's worse is the English who are so bloody ignorant. Makes I wanna kill
@@theoriginaljoeberg I would pronounce it "Lestersheer" :-) But then again, I've never been there. :-) Anyways, I just do this for fun, as I never monetise videos. So no worries. If people like it, fine. If not, they can go elsewhere. Maybe one day I will re-record some of these... those with the worst mistakes. Maybe I will even use some editing :-)
Please don't narrate anymore. It's just not your thing.
Please don't listen anymore, you have no taste!