Don't force me to tell mom that you are not practicing your CarpeDiem... tsk, tsk...But I will not go now, I wrote a holiday trip to London in the future.When remains to be seen.
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This should be about the
Don't force me to tell mom that you are not practicing your CarpeDiem... tsk, tsk...But I will not go now, I wrote a holiday trip to London in the future.When remains to be seen.
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He He.Don't force me to tell mom that you are not practicing your CarpeDiem... tsk, tsk...
This should be about thebestmost opportune times to get it off your bucket list, and probably less touristy and cheapest everrrrrrrrr.
...which was for many years an important BBC studio, then known as the Camden Theatre. A great many editions of the excellent Jazz Club were recorded there.I went to some pretty good parties at what used to be Camden Palace
BK looks good. No bullshit, straight to the point, subwoofers. As it should be. Sensible performance / specs. This model seems to have a good price-performance ratio:It‘s probably not somewhere to visit (but who knows!) but I have a subwoofer made by BK Electronics in Southend, not far from London. I’m far from an expert but they seem well thought of.
Nice. I have been to Belgium a few times and I like Belgium.Guys, I don't want to make you sad, but Belgium obviously is leading the world.
First we have the best beers.
That should be enough.
But we also have the best fries. And shrimps.
And, remaining in audio, we have kids like Bruno Putzeys (and Jan Didden) coming from here...
How to start a fight in a British thread. You have the second best beers, I've done the research, extensively. You are miles ahead with the fries, no one else is close.First we have the best beers.
Think they used to, but not anymore.Is not BK manufacturing subwoofers for REL?
Can't insert the right smiley ;-)How to start a fight in a British thread. You have the second best beers, I've done the research, extensively. You are miles ahead with the fries, no one else is close.
Yeh, well, maybe, but what about chips.How to start a fight in a British thread. You have the second best beers, I've done the research, extensively. You are miles ahead with the fries, no one else is close.
haha i agree with thatGo down the pub, have some thinking juice, I'm sure you will think of something then .
My recollection of the British HiFi industry of the late 1970s/early 1980s was divided into two clear camps. The well-engineered exemplified by Quad and KEF, and the fashionable, exemplified by Linn and NAIM. Most manufacturers, which were often small cottage-industries, tried to be identified with one camp or another. (Nytech with the Flat-Earth, A&R Cambridge with the well engineered, as just two examples)LS3/5A's were designed to reproduce and magnify distortion and noise/hiss in broadcast programme in outside broadcast vans!!!! They do this incredibly well, but 'accurate' music reproduction wasn't part of their portfolio, although some lovers of this model would disagree vociferously!
When I started in 73-74 in my store, Crown driven big IMF's were the thing and JBL L200's impressed us too (too damned big/wide I suspect, so we settled on L65 Jubals which I liked a lot). Spendor BC1's and frail sibling Rogers LS3/6's were the mid size offering with the KEF 104ab coming up close behind. Older goodies like B&W DM2's were left behind by this time. Gale 401's were way before their time but I'm eternally fond of them when driven right. Not UK, but the AR LST's were incredibly impressive and I'd love to hear some today as they could go close to a long wall and not hugely toed in. Tannoys were incredibly coloured but the 'Ard-Ons' went bloody loud I remember.
All this in the days before the Linn LP12 'fruitbox' turntable bent our ears and tastes and Naim Audio climbed on the back of it, totally destroying the UK high end industry and receptiveness to good things from other countries. I can say that back in hindsight, although some demonstration concepts did actually work well for everybody else (getting rid of comparators, more rigid speaker mounting and one pair of speakers set up in a dem room at any one time). Thank Gawd I had industry and pro friends who did their best to keep me more grounded, although they failed in the early to mid 80's...
I'll crawl back under my stone now... (shuffles off mumbling incoherently...)