Audio-guide script voiceover
Museum audio guide generator for exhibit scripts
Paste an exhibit stop, historic house tour, or docent-style dialogue. LyricWinter separates the speakers, assigns voices, and gives your team a playable audio pass before you commit to a tour app, QR rollout, or studio recording.
Sample exhibit stop audio
Play the generated guide and inspect each detected line.
Listen for orientation, speaker contrast, and whether the stop adds something beyond the wall label without distracting from the object.
Generator flow
From exhibit text to a reviewed audio-guide stop
LyricWinter is useful before distribution decisions: first detect the cast and choose voices, then render the reviewed text into a short audio pass your team can hear together.
- 01
Paste the tour-stop script
Start with the text your team already has: exhibit labels, docent notes, visitor questions, curator commentary, or short historical character lines.
- 02
Review the detected speakers
LyricWinter separates narrator, curator, visitor, and character lines before audio is rendered, so wrong speaker splits can be caught early.
- 03
Choose the voices for the stop
Switch public voices, keep a consistent narrator, or upload custom voices for your own guides and characters when the public catalog is not specific enough.
- 04
Render a reviewable audio pass
Generate the audio only after the speaker map and voices look right, then use the player and transcript to review pacing with stakeholders.
Good fit
Exhibit stops, historic house tours, gallery labels, docent training drafts, and audio proofs before vendor handoff.
Not a fit
QR-code hosting, GPS triggering, visitor analytics, translation review, live Q&A, or replacing professional access consulting.
Plain text tour stop
Before step 1NARRATOR: Stop four begins with a dented steel lunch pail from the river mill. CURATOR: Notice the initials scratched into the lid. They tell us this object belonged to one worker, not an anonymous crowd. VISITOR: So this was carried every day, not saved as a keepsake? MILL WORKER: At dawn, it held bread, an apple, and my only quiet minute before the looms started.
Clear speaker labels are enough for a first pass. A stop can be direct narration, docent dialogue, or a short character moment that adds context to the object.
Review state in the generator
What the first step returns before the audio pass, using the same review controls as the generator.
Voice Selection
before audioSentence Breakdown
line-by-lineThe audio step starts only after this review. Before that, the practical work is catching speaker mistakes, choosing voices that suit the stop, and deciding whether a custom guide or character voice is worth uploading.
FAQ
Museum audio guide generator questions
Can LyricWinter create museum audio guide narration?
Yes. Paste a tour stop or exhibit script, and LyricWinter can detect the speakers, assign voices, and generate a playable audio draft with an inspectable transcript.
Is this a full audio-guide app or QR-code platform?
No. LyricWinter is for creating and reviewing the audio tracks themselves. It does not handle QR codes, GPS triggering, hosting, visitor analytics, or museum content management.
Can a stop use more than one voice?
Yes. A stop can include narrator, curator, visitor, and historical character lines. Public voices can be switched, and custom voices can be uploaded when your own guide or character voice needs to be consistent.
Does this replace accessibility or curatorial review?
No. Use the generated audio and transcript as review material. Your team should still check accuracy, rights, accessibility requirements, and any institution-specific interpretation standards before publication.
Ready for your stop
Run the next exhibit script as audio
Paste a short stop, check the detected speakers and voice choices, then generate audio when the script is ready to hear.