betty reid soskin: the music saved me. joe: we'll go inside a new movie revealing an unknown chapter about a bay area icon. betty: but there's a part of my life that i've kept hidden for half a century. joe: and we'll visit a wine country natural phenomenon, now up for sale. chris conway: it's time for someone else to take it over. joe: hello, i'm joe rosato jr., and thanks for joining me for this edition of "fog city stories." well, the bay area has a very special musical legacy and at times it's gotten a little funky. let's meet up with a san francisco family carrying that musical torch. joe: there's a sound in san francisco's bayview district, a musical sound, maybe best described as the sound of a living room. this particular living room in a bayview apartment building is home base for the curtis family, a.k.a. the sea notes. nola curtis: we took all of the furniture out. instruments only. joe: it turned out the instruments gave it more life than most living rooms. kiki curtis: we barely used it before because we used