HAPPY CHRISTMAS FROM ALL OF US AT THE SONIC SOCIETY AND THE MUTUAL AUDIO NETWORK! This week we’re thrilled to provide a little Christmas spirit with The Holiday Spirit from Will Anderson and Stacey Pattison, and a retelling of the classic A Gift of the Magi from Odyssey Audioworks and Richard Summers, Tanja Milojevich, Josh Price, and Amy Price. All the very best to you!
We return to Mutual Presents! This week we’re back with another Wednesday Wonder’s “Exploring Tomorrow” and more classic old time radio from the Mutual Broadcasting System with the double feature of grand sci-fi tales “Overpopulation” and “Planet of Geniuses”.
We here at the Sonic Society are unabashed fans of Re-imagined Radio and our mutual partnership with Mutual! Last year, they produced a Christmas Sampler that Monday Matinee had on in August. We’d like to kindly restore it to the season here all of which features selections from Christmas episodes of radio programs like Suspense, Rocky Fortune, The Damon Runyon Theatre, The Jack Benny Program, Bing Crosby and The Kraft Music Hall, Vic and Sade, and the 2020 recorded performance of “A Radio Christmas Carol” by Metropolitan Performing Arts! Joyeux Noel!
And we’re back with Mutual Presents, sneak peaks at our daily releases on the Mutual Audio Network Youtube Channel. This week we’re back roaming the high seas with The Voyage of the Scarlet Queen and the feature: “The Story of Eight Historic Periods”. All aboard!
Jack and David are back with a fun-filled Sonic Society potpourri including episodes 1-3 of The Haunting of Selene from Misfits Audio written by our dear friend Alexa Chipman and post-produced by Jake Lewsey, followed by Barjory Bufffet: The Cruise Detective “Probably Claus” by Brad Beideman, and finally “Titch and the Enchanted Snow Globe” from Lie Hard with a Vengeance Podcast produced by Paul Blakeley and Rick Allden!
Jack and David bring in the season with the last two episodes of “Saint” Nick and the Big F*ck Up written and performed by Phil Rickaby and the Scare Fighters 3 Holiday Special- Solitary Place of Residence, written by Max Brown and Produced by Joe Wilkinson!
Welcome back to Mutual Presents! We’re back with another double-feature from First Nighter, the two-decade radio drama-comedy series that aired on various radio stations from 1930 to 1953 before landing on Mutual from 1942 to 1944. It’s “Give Up the Ship” and “Susan Stepped Out”!
Jack is once again solo and feeling a seasonal cold as he tries to bring in another season with “Saint” Nick and the Big F*ck Up is a hilarious, heartbreaking, and heartwarming Christmas audio drama with the first four of six episodes about a part-time mall Santa’s ability to mess everything up, written and performed by Phil Rickaby.
This week Jack is running solo catching up on a bunch of projects he brings us a trilogy of comedy-terror with Hannahpocalypse! Meet Hannah, the last zombie well after the apocalypse has come and gone. She’s so very happy you’re hear, listener… Meanwhile, many miles away Cali speeds her hovering Land Spinner home towards the Golden Gate settlement. And it all begins with episodes 1,2 and 3 because it’s AUDIO DRAMA TIME!
A Sound Effect Blog has a very interesting post on how to create horror sound effects.
It’s a detailed discussion from sound designer/re-recording mixer Joe Dzuban who has worked with some great horror masters of film today like James Wan and Guillermo del Toro.
While I bristle at the word “foley”- a term that’s used for movies and not really applicable for the sound effects we develop in audio drama, its great to have access to it. After all, foley is created to provide sound to coincide with footage shot with film. Audio Drama SFX are used live, as well as in post-production but created not to represent the sounds in visuals but rather to build story from the acting and the script. I’m known for not “crossing the streams” of my artistic endeavors even though I appreciate each and every form. But, if our medium matters, it’s important to give Audio Drama it’s due. You wouldn’t call the pages of your best-selling novel, “slides”, so why “foley” instead of “SFX”?
It is true that many people come to Audio Drama being visual consumers of story first, and that explains why so many think of foley as being the first term that comes to mind, but what’s more important is that we can find some crossover with the mediums, just like we do with live stage plays, comics, or audiobooks. Audio Drama is the most flexible of artistic mediums as it can wander across all others (except perhaps Miming!).
The key element is that generated sound in audio drama requires the listener to understand what the producers and writers are marking as important. While film can contrast foley against images to provide discordant tones and even moods, Audio Drama requires accuracy so that a fluency of sound creates a congruent understanding of the full setting and meaning of the story.
So, check out what tricks and tips in the above article might work well in an audio drama sound effect library, and bring your thoughts into the comments.