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the genre's premiere review magazine for short SF & Fantasy since 1993
Old Time Radio Episodes

Welcome to this new feature of Tangent Online. From time to time you'll see classic radio dramas posted here for your listening pleasure. You'll find science fiction, fantasy, dark fantasy, horror, suspense, and tales of mystery, all from the Golden Age of Radio. Ranging from the 1930's through classic radio's waning days in the early 1960's, and with each episode running generally just under a half hour, you'll find stories adapted from some of science-fiction's greatest talents, such as Isaac Asimov, Ray Bradbury, Robert A. Heinlein, Murray Leinster, Fred Pohl, James Gunn, Frederic Brown, H. Beam Piper, and numerous others, as well as many original scripts written specifically for each of the various shows.

You will also find classic tales of terror as voiced by the likes of Orson Welles, Boris Karloff, Peter Lorre, and Vincent Price.

Decades before the advent of widespread, affordable, commercial television (the 1920's, 1930's, 1940's, and even the very early 1950's), radio was where America received the vast majority of its home entertainment, music, and news. From dawn until late in the evening, radio stations (local and national) filled the airwaves with a variety of programming, much like commercial television does today. One could find episodes of Gunsmoke, The Cisco Kid, and The Lone Ranger alongside such diverse fare as the Sealtest Variety Theater (with guest stars Dorothy Lamour, Dean Martin & Jerry Lewis, and Charles Laughton to name but a few), Academy Award Theater, the Adventures of Ellery Queen (and Sam Spade, Sherlock Holmes, The Saint, Nero Wolfe, and more, played by some of Hollywood's top stars), the Black Museum (a police procedural starring Orson Welles), Dragnet (starring Jack Webb), and even episodes of the never-say-die and ever-popular Ripley's Believe It or Not (from as far back as the 1930's), right alongside such musical, or variety entertainments as the Andrew Sisters, Breakfast in Hollywood (a morning "man on the street" show performed in a Hollywood diner), The Bing Crosby Show, and The Bob Hope Show (precursors of such variety shows as television's The Ed Sullivan Show and countless others over the years).

Quiz shows, game shows, audience participation shows, dramatizations of classic novels, historical docu-dramas and soap operas--all were born on radio and thrive today on television. There were also many shows during the 1940's devoted to, or in some way about, World War II, such as You Can't Do Business with Hitler, Words at War, and GI Journal  (a musical-variety show whose purpose was to build morale for soldiers overseas; it featured the likes of Jack Benny, Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, Gary Cooper, Mel Blanc {the voice of Bugs Bunny and innumerable other cartoon favorites}, Groucho Marx, Lucille Ball, Alan Ladd, Robert Young, Lionel Barrymore, and many more).

When television began to permeate America's homes on a broad scale in the 1950s, many of the most popular radio shows became tv's first shows (drawing their radio audiences along with them). As well, many radio actors were able to transition into the first tv stars--though some would not make the transition from radio to tv successfully as actors for a variety of reasons, though they would find steady work for decades to come as the voices behind some very popular classic tv cartoon characters. 

The relationship between old time radio and early television is many-layered and intricately woven, but our interest lies in those classic radio shows devoted to science-fiction, fantasy, dark fantasy, horror, suspense, and mystery. As such, you'll find episodes from the following radio series', and more as we go along:  Dark Fantasy, Suspense, Dimension X (the forerunner of X Minus One), X Minus One, Lights Out, The Mysterious Traveler, Tales of Tomorrow, Escape, The Witch's Tale, Inner Sanctum, Mystery in the Air, The Avenger, and The Shadow.

A word of gratitude and acknowledgment is due at this time. From 1979-1992 DAW Books published a twenty-five volume landmark series of thick paperbacks with the overall title of The Great SF Stories. It began with the year 1939--the year considered the beginning of modern science-fiction, when Astounding Science Fiction and its new editor, John W. Campbell, Jr., began to reshape the entire genre and bring a measure of maturity to the SF story. The series ended with the year 1963, the year before stories would become eligible for the newly founded (1965) Science Fiction Writers of America's Nebula Awards for stories published in 1964. Each volume provided an historical overview of each year covered, as well as introductory notes on each story by the series editors, Isaac Asimov and Martin H. Greenberg. In my own prefatory remarks to many of the old time radio episodes herein--and while other sources (and my own memory) were used as source material--I have borrowed quite liberally from those yearly introductions by Isaac Asimov and Martin H. Greenberg. They are invaluable time capsules into the stories of each particular year and provide fascinating historical (and personal to the editors) context. Therefore, I am grateful to Messrs. Asimov and Greenberg and hope they (now only the latter, sadly, with the passing of Asimov) will not begrudge my use of the introductory format they used to such great advantage in their wonderful series. In this case, imitation truly is meant to be the sincerest form of flattery.

While individual episodes of many old time radio shows can be downloaded for free from many websites (realizing you take your chances with the quality in some cases, and must hunt and search for hours at times to find anything worth keeping), and there are also sites where one can download either individual episodes cheaply (under a dollar), or for a rather exorbitant price (but with attractive, plastic-boxed sets) order maybe ten or twenty episodes (with a mere two episodes/CD) of any given show for $20-$40--for overall quality of reproduction, extremely low cost ($5/MP3 CD), speedy delivery, and the enormous number of episodes one receives on each MP3 disc (up to 50 hrs. and up to 70+ episodes on a single CD) we recommend visiting the Old Time Radio catalog (OTRcat) website. Simply click on the OTRcat/Sci-Fi banner below and begin building your own old time radio library.

As a bonus with every order, OTRcat offers a free Sampler MP3 CD of your choice (there are six). Each disc includes a staggering amount of highly varied and fascinating material from all over the classic radio spectrum. For a broad sampling of the wide variety of material to be found at the OTRcat website, click the play bar on the Old Time Radio banner located on our front page. Each and every day there will be an episode of something new and different for your enjoyment, courtesy of OTRcat.

In the meantime, just click on the titles below to listen to the science fiction, fantasy, horror, dark mystery, and suspense episodes we'll have for you on a regular basis. We're debuting with five, and will be adding at least one per week.

Please note that the most recent OTR episodes are listed first, at the top of the list below, and if you wish to listen to them in chronological order, as presented, simply scroll to the bottom and work your way up.


   Display # 
# Article Title Author
1 The Potters of Firsk -- Jack Vance Dave Truesdale
2 Suspense -- The Green Lorelei Dave Truesdale
3 Soldier Boy -- Michael Shaara Dave Truesdale
4 Escape -- The Scarlet Plague Dave Truesdale
5 A Pride of Carrots -- Robert Nathan Dave Truesdale
6 The Defenders -- Philip K. Dick Dave Truesdale
7 Surface Tension -- James Blish Dave Truesdale
8 Escape -- The Birds Dave Truesdale
9 The Shadow -- The White God Dave Truesdale
10 Eye of Evil -- Escape Dave Truesdale
11 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea -- Jules Verne Dave Truesdale
12 Tsylana -- James E. Gunn Dave Truesdale
13 And the Moon Be Still as Bright -- Ray Bradbury Dave Truesdale
14 Treasure Island -- Robert Louis Stevenson Dave Truesdale
15 The Bottle Imp -- Robert Louis Stevenson Dave Truesdale
16 Suspense -- A Passage to Beneris Dave Truesdale
17 Exploring Tomorrow -- The Mutants Dave Truesdale
18 Sam, This Is You -- Murray Leinster Dave Truesdale
19 Dr. Grimshaw's Sanitarium -- Fletcher Pratt Dave Truesdale
20 Dark Fantasy -- Rendezvous With Satan Dave Truesdale
21 Death to the Shadow -- The Shadow Dave Truesdale
22 Suspense -- The Most Dangerous Game Dave Truesdale
23 Escape -- The Drums of the Fore and Aft Dave Truesdale
24 Suspense -- The Lodger Dave Truesdale
25 Suspense -- The Black Door Dave Truesdale
26 Death Is An Art -- The Shadow Dave Truesdale
27 The Voyages of Sinbad Dave Truesdale
28 The Mysterious Traveler -- Queen of the Cats Dave Truesdale
29 Brave New World (Pts. 1 & 2) -- Aldous Huxley Dave Truesdale
30 A Dream of Armageddon -- H. G. Wells Dave Truesdale
31 Suspense -- Heavens to Betsy Dave Truesdale
32 Star, Bright -- Mark Clifton Dave Truesdale
33 Conqueror's Isle -- Nelson Bond Dave Truesdale
34 Protection -- Robert Sheckley Dave Truesdale
35 The Coffin Cure -- Alan E. Nourse Dave Truesdale
36 A Christmas Carol -- Charles Dickens Dave Truesdale
37 The Plot to Overthrow Christmas - Norman Corwin Dave Truesdale
38 How The Grinch Stole Christmas Dave Truesdale
39 The Category Inventor -- Arthur Sellings Dave Truesdale
40 Tarzan -- African Thanksgiving Dave Truesdale
41 Junkyard -- Clifford D. Simak Dave Truesdale
42 The Avenger -- The Mystery of the Giant Brain Dave Truesdale
43 The Marvelous Barrastro -- Peter Lorre Dave Truesdale
44 The Witch's Tale -- Graveyard Mansion Dave Truesdale
45 The Pit and the Pendulum -- Vincent Price Dave Truesdale
46 Lights Out -- Valse Trieste Dave Truesdale
47 Lights Out--The Ball (aka Paris Macabre) Dave Truesdale
48 The Digger -- Torin Thatcher Dave Truesdale
49 Three Skeleton Key -- Vincent Price Dave Truesdale
50 Halloween Week - Karloff and Lovecraft Dave Truesdale
51 The Seventh Order -- Jerry Sohl Dave Truesdale
52 Watchbird -- Robert Sheckley Dave Truesdale
53 Fugue in C Minor -- Vincent Price Dave Truesdale
54 Dark Fantasy -- The Man Who Came Back Dave Truesdale
55 Inner Sanctum -- The Lonely Sleep Dave Truesdale
56 Kaleidoscope -- Ray Bradbury Dave Truesdale
57 Protective Mimicry -- Algis Budrys Dave Truesdale
58 Three from The Shadow -- Alfred Bester Dave Truesdale
59 The Shadow/Death House Rescue -- Orson Welles Dave Truesdale
60 Stroke of Fate: Our Neighbor in Alaska Steven H Silver
61 The Haunted Corpse -- Frederik Pohl Dave Truesdale
62 Quiet, Please -- Pathetic Fallacy Dave Truesdale
63 Nightmare -- Stephen Vincent Benet Dave Truesdale
64 The Cave of Night -- James Gunn Dave Truesdale
65 The Adaptive Ultimate -- Stanley G. Weinbaum Dave Truesdale
66 Child's Play -- William Tenn Dave Truesdale
67 She -- H. Rider Haggard Dave Truesdale
68 Donovan's Brain (Pts. 1 & 2) -- Curt Siodmak Dave Truesdale
69 Two from The Mysterious Traveler Dave Truesdale
70 Lights Out -- Immortal Gentleman Dave Truesdale
71 A Pail of Air -- Fritz Leiber Dave Truesdale
72 Earth Abides (Pts. 1 & 2) -- George R. Stewart Dave Truesdale