Quiet Please 481031 072 Calling All Souls
# Quiet Please: Calling All Souls
On a fog-shrouded evening, your radio crackles to life with the unmistakable opening of *Quiet Please*—that haunting theme music that sends a delicious shiver down your spine. In "Calling All Souls," listeners are drawn into a tale where the boundaries between the living and the dead grow dangerously thin. As the night deepens, a mysterious summons reaches out across dimensions, calling to those who should have long since departed. The production wraps you in an atmosphere of creeping dread, where ordinary surroundings become sinister and every shadow holds menace. Master sound designer Wally Maher's meticulous craftsmanship transforms simple radio frequencies into a gateway to the supernatural—footsteps echo where no one walks, voices whisper through interference, and silence itself becomes terrifying. This is *Quiet Please* at its finest: intimate, psychological horror delivered straight into your living room.
What made *Quiet Please* revolutionary among the golden age of radio was its commitment to sophisticated, character-driven horror that eschewed monsters and gore in favor of psychological unease and moral ambiguity. Produced by Bud Wiser and running from 1947 to 1949, the series proved that terror didn't require elaborate production numbers or famous actors—instead, it demanded only a skilled cast, expert writing, and the listener's willingness to imagine. Each episode unfolds like a short story, economical and precise, trusting the audience's own mind to complete the frightening picture.
If you've never experienced *Quiet Please*, "Calling All Souls" offers the perfect entry point into this landmark program. Dim your lights, settle into your chair, and prepare yourself for the particular kind of fear that only radio can deliver—the fear that lives in the space between what you hear and what you imagine. Tune in and discover why audiences huddled around their sets nearly eighty years ago, rapt in delicious terror.