Voice Preservation

Support for survivors who cannot record new audio

For many stroke survivors — especially those living with aphasia or significant speech loss — creating a personalized synthetic voice starts with whatever recordings already exist. You may not have recent audio, and that’s okay. Your older clips, even brief ones, often hold enough of your natural voice to build something meaningful and familiar.

This page will guide you through finding those recordings, preparing them, and getting help when you need it.

Start with What You Have

You likely have more voice samples than you think. Look for moments where you spoke naturally — even in the background of family events.

Common places to check:

  • Home and family videos on your phone, family phones, cloud albums, or old cameras
  • Social media clips on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, or shared stories
  • Voicemails and audio messages saved in your phone, texting apps, WhatsApp, Messenger, or Signal
  • Work or school recordings such as Zoom/Teams calls, presentations, interviews, or class projects
  • Call recordings from banks, healthcare systems, insurance companies, or any service that announces “this call may be recorded” — you can often request a copy
  • Shared drives where family or friends might have uploaded past videos
  • Old computers, SD cards, or external drives

Tip: Ask friends and family to search too. Someone else may have the perfect clip without realizing how important it is now.

If You Have No Recordings at All

You can still create a meaningful voice.

  • A close family member or friend with a similar tone, age range, and accent can serve as a voice donor.
  • You can also choose any ElevenLabs voice and adjust its tone, warmth, speed, or pitch to match how you want to sound now.

Your voice is personal — and it can be shaped to reflect your identity, not just your past.

How to Clean Audio Yourself

You don’t need expensive software to clean or prepare your recordings. Many free or low-cost tools can help remove background noise and highlight your voice.

What to look for in a tool:

  • Noise reduction
  • Voice or speech isolation
  • Trimming and cutting
  • Volume leveling
  • Simple EQ adjustments

What matters most:

  • Choose short, clear clips (30 seconds to 3 minutes).
  • Your voice should be louder than background noise.
  • Avoid heavy filters — too much processing can distort your sound.
  • Save your files as MP3, WAV, or M4A.
  • Label them clearly:
    Firstname_Lastname_ClipSource_Year.mp3

It’s okay if your clips aren’t perfect. ElevenLabs can work with surprising variety as long as your voice is present and understandable.

Request Help from Volunteers

If your recordings are noisy, hard to work with, or if you simply prefer support, you can request help from trained volunteer audio editors through ElevenLabs.

They will:

  • Clean your audio
  • Remove background noise
  • Improve clarity
  • Prepare the files for voice creation

Typical turnaround: About one week (7 business days).

Submit your request:
➡️ Request Audio Editing Support Form

You’ll be asked to:

  • Upload your audio files (MP3, WAV, or M4A)
  • Provide one short “voice identification” phrase per file
  • Confirm Stroke Onward as your partner organization

Next Step: Create Your Voice

Once your files are cleaned — whether you did it yourself or received help — your next step is to upload them into ElevenLabs and begin building your personalized voice.

This video walks you through:

  • Uploading your clips
  • Testing your samples
  • Creating a ProVoice
  • Adjusting and refining your sound