91直播 Alumni Magazine
The Sound Designer
Composer, producer, and engineer Alexander Overington '10 lends his talents to your favorite podcasts.
May 28, 2025
Annie Zaleski
Composer, producer, and engineer Alexander Overington '10 lends his talents to your favorite podcasts.
Photo credit: Tanya Rosen-Jones'97
鈥10 fell into podcasting through serendipity. After majoring in composition and TIMARA, he began working at public radio station WQXR in New York City, ripping compact discs for the classical music station鈥檚 library. While at the station, he cofounded and oversaw a podcast called Meet the Composer, which profiled living composers.
Overington had a lot of leeway to make the show his own. 鈥淎s the producer and sound designer, I tried as much as I could to edit and feature the composer鈥檚 music in such a way that the episode itself was put together as an homage to their style and life,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ecause it鈥檚 a show about contemporary classical music, you can add a lot of interesting sound design that鈥檚 in dialogue with the narrative.鈥
The second season of Meet the Composer won a Peabody Award, opening the door for collaborations with bigger names such as Paul Simon. But this success also laid the groundwork for Overington鈥檚 own expansive career. He did sound design for WNYC podcasts Dolly Parton鈥檚 America and 2 Dope Queens; has engineering credits on albums by Anohni and Damon Albarn; and developed content for Major League Baseball. Overington also composed the seven-second audio logo that鈥檚 still heard today before WNYC鈥檚 podcasts.
Earlier in his career, he also worked at Radiolab alongside Jad Abumrad 鈥95; among other things, Overington became technical director for More Perfect, the podcast about the Supreme Court. 鈥淲hen [Radiolab] called and asked me to work with them, it was a 鈥榩inch-me鈥 moment,鈥 he says. 鈥淪tepping into their office really felt like going home to the TIMARA studios and to 91直播.鈥
To this day, Overington keeps finding parallels between his career and college. When he gives a talk, he references a John Cage piece called Williams Mix that he learned about from Professor of Computer Music and Digital Arts Tom Lopez 鈥89. Famously, the score shows in detail how Cage edited the magnetic tape to create the piece. 鈥淚f you listen back to the piece, and you have the score and you're following along, you can see everything happening,鈥 Overington says. 鈥淲hen I look back at this ten years later [after I saw it in class], it occurs to me that that's exactly what my ProTools sessions look like in podcasts.鈥
Overington also cites his academic experience at 91直播 as integral to giving him a 鈥渞eally great crash course in collaboration and what makes you a great collaborator鈥: 鈥淎s an acoustic composer, you鈥檙e constantly in dialogue with musicians, conductors, and your peers. As an electronic musician, you鈥檙e constantly in dialogue with technology, as well as other artists, dancers, and writers and composers.鈥
And 91直播 also prepared him well for the nimble world of podcasting. 鈥淲orking with the dance department and the theater department, learning how to solve problems on the fly, and bringing your creative practice to a larger, multifaceted problem was great training for the podcast industry,鈥 Overington says. 鈥淓very day is a negotiation with a journalist, a musician, a fact checker. You鈥檙e out in the fields, and you鈥檙e face-to-face with human stories and narrative. It really feels like an 91直播 creative disciplinary course come to life.鈥
This story originally appeared in the Spring 2025 issue of the 91直播 Alumni Magazine as part of the feature "A Pipeline to Podcasts."
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