Spanish Sundown

Samuel Mattern

Can you hear the voices? They are trapped in objects from Spain’s past. An antique door knocker that witnessed a beheading. A murderous revolver hidden under the floor tile of a theater. A centuries-old castle stone pissed on by a madman. The sun goes down and everyday people stumble across these objects. When they touch them, the voices tell their story. Stories of Celtic warriors high on shrooms, mad bulls, gold-toothed bandoleers in hidden caves, Nazi collaborators, penis-shrinking witches, adulterous kings… Discover the horrific blood stories of Spain’s past. Discover the horror…that lies inside your own mind. Spanish Sundown is the result of years of ongoing historical research. An original audio drama production, it features the authentic sounds of Spain recorded on-site. Close your eyes and travel here with your mind. Listen to the voices. Episodes drop every other Tuesday. Subscribe now. WARNING: Be advised that Spanish Sundown is a horror podcast that rips the cover off the darkest sides of the human condition. It contains violence, abuse and other similar adult themes. Consider before listening. spanishsundown.com IG, FB, Reddit: @spanishsundown 

  1. May 19

    Manuela Malasaña: I Didn't Mean To

    In today’s story, Carlota is partying with her boyfriend Lucas in Madrid’s Plaza Dos de Mayo square. Carlota loves Lucas, but sometimes he does…stuff. Stuff that pisses her off so bad, all she can see are the dark spots of irritation behind her eyes. When she touches the iron fence around the statues of Captains Daoíz and Velarde, Carlota travels back to 1808 Spain and meets Manuela Malasaña, the 17-year-old embroiderer who died in the uprising against Napoleon’s occupying forces. They called her a national hero. But was she really? And is Carlota really guilty of what happens to Lucas if she can’t see through the dark spots behind her eyes? --- 1-Check out the location of Plaza Dos de Mayo here. 2-See Eugenio Álvarez Dumont’s 1887 painting of Manuela fighting alongside her father here. You can visit this painting at the Prado Museum of Madrid. 3-See the sculpture Death of Manuela Malasaña by Antonio Moltó y Lluch here. You can visit it at the History Museum of Madrid. 4-See Goya’s The 3rd of May 1808 painting of executions ordered by Murat (at the Prado Museum) and The 2nd of May 1808 at the Fundación Goya en Aragón (complete with Mamelukes). You can truly feel the terror. 5-Check out our website or follow Spanish Sundown on Facebook and Instagram to see original footage taken while researching and recording on-site at Plaza Dos de Mayo. Join our community! --- © 2025 Samuel Mattern. All rights reserved.

    42 min
  2. The Tablada Sanatorium: Lorca's Reckoning

    May 5

    The Tablada Sanatorium: Lorca's Reckoning

    If someone hurt a person you loved, how long would you be willing to wait to make them pay? In today’s story, guest actress Khephra C. White introduces us to a nurse named Helena. She toys with her favorite golden brooch with red rubies while she waits at a lonely hospital. When a new patient named Alfredo arrives, he tries to take her piece of jewelry. The voices inside the brooch take them both back to Granada in 1936, where they meet the poet Federico García Lorca just as Civil War breaks out in Spain. It turns out that Helena and Alfredo go way back. Way, way back. And Alfredo might want her brooch…but Helena wants her revenge even more. --- 1-Don’t forget to vote Spanish Sundown for the Audience Choice Award in the UK International Audio Drama Festival! This kind of recognition would help to put the show on the map and make it last. So, if you’d like to show appreciation for my work, Spanish Sundown stands a real chance of winning and voting only takes a second. I’d be so grateful! Voting form available here. 2-Khephra C. White cowrote this episode and voiced Helena, Carla and narration. Check out her IG account to see her work as writer, actress and comedian (she’s hilarious—if you’re in Madrid, go see her shows): @darqueroast 3-See the location of the abandoned tuberculosis sanatorium here. If you are able to visit in person, swing by the restaurant with the chimney smoke on the other side of the lonely trucker highway—it feels like the only inhabited building in the otherwise abandoned town. 4-Read Federico García Lorca’s biography here, read a bit of his poetry here, and read some of his plays here (they’re all good, but Blood Wedding/Bodas de sangre is one of my personal favorites). 5-Check out Spanish Sundown’s webpage or our Facebook and Instagram accounts for footage of Khephra and me while recording and doing on-site research at the sanatorium. Drop by and leave a comment—hearing from you makes my day! --- © 2025 Samuel Mattern. All rights reserved.

    51 min
  3. Feb 24

    Palacio Canto del Pico: Entitlement

    In 1915, Count José María del Palacio y Abárzuza stole a statuette of St. James the Greater from the grave of 15th-century Spanish royalty. In 1969, this figure appeared in the New York Met Museum. How did it get there? The answer lies with the Count’s mansion: Beak Cliff House, or Palacio del Canto del Pico. In today’s story, we meet David. David is a nice guy. Too nice. In a world where everyone always feels entitled to take, he gives. When his snotty boss makes him hide a mysterious USB drive from the police, he embarks on a mission of corporate intrigue that takes him straight to the Count’s abandoned mansion. There, he finds a statue of the Virgin Mary. The voices trapped inside show him the fate of the stolen Spanish artifact and introduce him to the Count, a weird little American man named Arthur Byne, and even William Randolph Hearst. He stops giving. Because David is entitled to take, too. ---------------------------- 1-A link to the New York Met page showing the catalog entry for the statuette of St. James the Greater, currently in the museum’s possession. 2-The official webpage of the Carthusian monastery in Miraflores where they recount the theft. 3-The location of Beak Cliff House or Palacio del Canto del Pico up on a cliff in Torrelodones, Madrid. 4-A picture of Arthur Byne with his weird little beard thing. 5-A picture of the Count as a young boy. 6-Los prodigios de Gillingham by José Francisco Rodil Lombardía. Our mansion, stolen loot, bribes to Francois collaborators and Nazi colluders all appear in this novel. See a summary here. 7-Check out video of the creepy mansion I took while recording and researching the episode. You can see it on Spanish Sundown’s webpage, or on Facebook or Instagram, where you can also join our online community. --- Subscribe to listen to friend podcast Counterbalance here! You can also check out their Facebook or Instagram. --- © 2025 Samuel Mattern. All rights reserved.

    51 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.6
out of 5
11 Ratings

About

Can you hear the voices? They are trapped in objects from Spain’s past. An antique door knocker that witnessed a beheading. A murderous revolver hidden under the floor tile of a theater. A centuries-old castle stone pissed on by a madman. The sun goes down and everyday people stumble across these objects. When they touch them, the voices tell their story. Stories of Celtic warriors high on shrooms, mad bulls, gold-toothed bandoleers in hidden caves, Nazi collaborators, penis-shrinking witches, adulterous kings… Discover the horrific blood stories of Spain’s past. Discover the horror…that lies inside your own mind. Spanish Sundown is the result of years of ongoing historical research. An original audio drama production, it features the authentic sounds of Spain recorded on-site. Close your eyes and travel here with your mind. Listen to the voices. Episodes drop every other Tuesday. Subscribe now. WARNING: Be advised that Spanish Sundown is a horror podcast that rips the cover off the darkest sides of the human condition. It contains violence, abuse and other similar adult themes. Consider before listening. spanishsundown.com IG, FB, Reddit: @spanishsundown