Night Transmissions is a 120 minute show featuring vintage radio shows. In this show... The Clock, â Cousin Maryâ 3/3/48 Inner Sanctum 2/2/45, âDeath in The Depths" Vanishing Point 2/15/85, âStartex B16â True Detective Mysteries 8/26/37, âShipboard Beautyâ
More at http://www.nighttransmissions.com/
This is a 64 kbs version of a weekly program which began on a now defunct low power FM station (KSOW) in Cottage Grove, OR Since there seems to be some interest in the show I have decided to continue . In this connection I will post a new show by Tuesday or Wednesday of each week. I will post a new show by Tuesday or Wednesday of each week. There is also a 128 bit version.
In the main, each episode consists of four approximately 30-minute long programs (not always, as sometimes I use a longer form show, so it may be 3 or fewer) and some filler to bring them in at 120 minutes. .
Broadcast Advisories
Use these programs in any way that suits you, commercial, non-commercial (well,don't sell it). Use them on your low power FM station or your AM station. Stream it on your internet station or stream. Whatever. Edit them if you want to, however you want to! I'm easy. In a few cases commercials have been left in but in those cases there is disclaimer stating that they are there for "historical perspective" only. I have edited out any underwriter spots that once existed. There is no comment about run times ( i.e. "It's Sunday night at 10 pm and this is Night Transmissions.") Also I have edited out any mention of the town I live in. In other words I have endeavored to make make these programs as "Evergreen" and global as possible. I would even consider making (at some point) shows that are tailored to some degree for specific locations. In most cases the mp3 file runs a little longer than 120 minutes. However, in all cases the main show comes in at under 120 minutes; anything in excess of 120 minutes is just music that can safely be faded out.
As of show 21 there are 30 second musical interludes at 30,60 and 90 minutes. with the last 5 to 10 minutes or so of the show uninterrupted music that can be faded out on without too much ado, Exact times will be in the mp3 comment tag
If you do broadcast or stream these I'd really be grateful if you dropped me a note.
This episode contains the following segments...
Segment One:
The Clock was a thirty-minute suspense and mystery series that first aired on November the 3rd of 1946 and ran until May the 23rd of 1948 for a total of 78 shows. 65 of those shows were written by Lawrence Klee and produced in Australia by Grace Gibson.
Each story began with the same words, "Sunrise and sunset, promise and fulfilment, birth and death...the whole drama of life is written in the sands of time". The Clock was imported into the United States by ABC.. The series with it's generally generic settings who's actors and actresses spoke without a perceptible Australian accent made the program sounded "American" and therefore was a natural import. It ran on ABC for 15 months airing frist 65 existing programs then continued for another 13 weeks with an All-American cast with new scripts for a total of 78 episodes.
todayâs episode is from March the third of 1947, â Cousin Maryâ. Itâs the story of Laura, Joe and Cousin Mary. Who comes to stay for âjust one nightâ... or maybe itâs just, âa little whileâ. They get along just fine. Until the worm turns and turns again.
Segment Two:
Taking its name from a popular series of mystery novels, Inner Sanctum Mysteries debuted over NBCâs Blue Network in January 1941.
Inner Sanctum Mysteries featured one of the most iconic openings in radio history. First an organist hit's a dissonant chord. Next a doorknob turns, and the âcreaking doorâ slowly began to open. So impressive was this opening that when South Africain radio ran its own version of the show it was called The Creaking Door.
Every week, Inner Sanctum Mysteries told stories of ghosts, murderers and lunatics, with a cast consisting of veteran radio actors. Although Produced in New York, there were occasional guest appearances by Hollywood stars such as Boris Karloff, Peter Lorre and Claude Rains.
âRaymondâ, the host, had a droll sense of humor, and an appetite for ghoulish puns. Raymond's influence can be seen among horror hosts everywhere, from The Crypt-Keeper to Elvira, and even more so among his contemporaries on radio ."Raymond" was played untill 1945 by Raymond Edward Johnson. Then Paul McGrath took over and played "Raymond" until the show ended production in 1952 .
Producer Hiram Brown was so taken with the creaking door that when he produced and directed The CBS Radio Mystery Theater in the 1970s he would use it again.
Inner Sanctum Mysteries was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in 1988.
Todayâs episode is from February 2nd 1945, âDeath in The Depths". better than that one. The one you have used for years I mean.
This is the story about the âStarTex B16â the most capable and self-deluded coffee maker this side of a Douglas Adams story.
Segment Four:
True Detective Mysteries from August 26 of 1937, âShipboard Beautyâ.
One of the earliest radio series, âTrue Detective Mysteriesâ broadcast over CBS every Thursday evening beginning in 1929. Itâs stock and trade was producing true stories of real police cases.
Perhaps wanting to cater to a less blood-thirsty crowd than itâs contemporary, âLightâs Outâ the show was remarkably non-violent. No-one seems to have been actually murdered in the course of the narration. Mind you, there are plenty of murders, itâs just that the first the listener knows about them is when a body is discovered or reported.
Rather that relying on a canned library sound effects were produced live in the studio So, when a struggle was indicated the actors would struggle; among themselves. When the gongs and sirens were heard there were gongs and sirens present in the studio. I donât know if this practice of early radio added anything to itâs realism as so many people claim. Maybe it did, maybe not.
True Detective Mysteries was based on the âTrue Detective Magazineâ which first published in 1924 ( and would not cease publication until 1995).