Seth Greene Samuel is a composer and sound designer. www.sethgsamuel.com
(...or maybe six seconds.) A Ben Trefny classic. Recorded by Chris Hambrick.
Season five (?), Game 2. The Speech.
Disasters often befall the Golden Gate Bridge. You know, in movies. + Jad Abumrad guesses those movies.
WREN AND ZEPHYR HAVE SEEN THE MOVIE STAR WARS
Speech written and performed by Ben Trefny, recorded by Martina Castro, and edited and 'scored' by Seth Samuel. Music: "Fight for Camelot" by Jerry Goldsmith
***Oh my god! Such and such a thing has been true the whole time and we're just now realizing it!*** This episode won't make any sense to you unless you've listened to part 1 already. Sorry about that.
In which our hero plays two songs on one piano at the same time, sort of!
A story from Daniel Wallach, 2014. All music by David Wingo from the "Take Shelter" original score. Produced by Alyssa Kapnik and Seth Samuel.
Here are the concluding thoughts of 27 radio stories. By Seth Samuel & Alyssa Kapnik, 2014.
'RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK' By Alyssa Kapnik
A non-narrated piece featuring Jason Becker. Reported and produced by Seth Samuel and Alyssa Kapnik in San Francisco, for KCRW's 24-Hour Radio Race, 2013. Music by Seth Samuel.
Zephyr Norman Rockness demonstrates some of his math wizardry.
'The Lord of the Rings' by Alyssa Kapnik
At the radio station, I have many opportunities to record people for my own devices. One month in 2013, I asked everyone about socks. No reason.
...another loss, another historic speech from Coach Masher Ben Trefny Music: "Flight Into Space" from Moonraker.
I interviewed Mashers first-baseman Patrick Galvan as we hurried to the game.
I am an idiot for not having done this sooner. Mr. Ben Trefny delivers an amazing speech after every game. Music: "The Place Where Dreams Come True" from Field of Dreams.
I got a new (old) spinet. It was wildly out-of-tune. I hired the highest-rated piano tuner on Yelp. It was Alex who informed me my new piano wasn't a piano, but a spinet. He gave me permission to record him at work; and I made this "montage" out of the 3-hour recording. I think a 'bending' piano note is one of the weirdest-sounding things, and a single piano note suddenly getting louder is weird too, but in a more subtle way.