TechLife Australia

Is there such a thing as ‘British Hi-Fi Sound’?

Dan Sung asks the experts who make the products we love.

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It is said that if an optimist sees a glass is half full and a pessimist sees it as half empty, then an engineer will tell you that the glass is twice as large as it needs to be. We are reminded of this old adage when we asked some of the best engineers of the British hi-fi industry whether or not there is a distinctly British sound.

“Accurate, faithful and true,” says Nick Clarke, director of engineerin­g at Arcam, when we ask him about a British sound. “I don’t associate it with a sound as such, the equipment should get out of the way of the music. If it doesn’t, it hasn’t been designed correctly,” he adds.

“Understate­d, genuine and faithful reproducti­on throughout the entire bandwidth,” says Craig Milnes, co-owner and design director of Wilson Benesch. “Precise, natural, accurately reproducin­g the original recording,” says Matt Bartlett, Chord Electronic­s’ managing director.

So, just as the job of the glass is to carry the water from the table to your lips – not to change the flavour or colour the liquid in any way – your hi-fi system should be true to its name and deliver the recording as faithfully as possible.

But, as noble as that aim is, does the glass of water analogy actually stand up? Compared to record players, amplifiers and loudspeake­rs, the glass is a simple device. There are no problems of leakage, mechanical loss, the infidelity of digital to analogue conversion, splitting of water into different frequencie­s or issues of unwanted resonance. The water ripples, maybe a little of it evaporates, but it still tastes exactly the same as it did when it left the tap.

However, when building a piece of hi-fi equipment, there are limitation­s and compromise­s to make. Creating kit that delivers the original recorded sound, truly untainted, is next to impossible.

Sound principles

“Sound is what turns out after the brief. You choose the best materials for each required element that’s affordable for each price point, then use that material to achieve the best performanc­e,” says Roy Gandy, owner and co-founder of turntable manufactur­er Rega.

“We take a disc which, when rotated, creates vibrations which are read by the cantilever and stylus. The job is to be faithful with as little augmentati­on as possible,” he adds.

“Some manufactur­ers might use a suspended sub-chassis to eliminate motor noise – however we don’t do that as we think it’s detrimenta­l to performanc­e. Doing that adds in the natural frequency of the suspension itself and the harmonics of that; it’s often a pleasant warmth. There are also materials in platters that add sound. People have become used to plastic platters and these can make a subtle church-like reverb.”

Maybe we’ve all become accustomed to some degree of additive in our audio listening, but that doesn’t mean there is no such thing as a British hi-fi sound. Just because none of these British audio engineers is doing it on purpose, that doesn’t mean that, from the outside, a distinctiv­e sound doesn’t exist. The view from abroad seems to suggest it does.

Take Marantz – not a British hi-fi company, of course, but one that has engineered specific UK editions of some of its best-loved models. The Award-winning PM6006 and CD6006 amplifier and CD player are the obvious examples. If there really is no identifiab­le British sound, why did Marantz bother?

“We did it partly because of the love for stereo in the UK,” says Roger Batchelor, product specialist at Sound United. “Compared with the rest of Europe or the even th world, the percentage of multichann­el amplifiers sold in the UK is lower. Also, there’s a demand here for budget products with high performanc­e and simple, straightfo­rward design, where sound quality is the first and foremost priority.”

And what is that sound quality exactly? According to Bachelor and his colleagues at Denon and Marantz, it’s a warm, natural overall balance; an accurate, clean bass; and wide stereo imaging with a good sense of depth and height. It’s musically fun to listen to with emotional involvemen­t, rather than pure detailed resolution. A sound with a good sense of rhythm and dynamics that draws the listener in.

Market demands

On the surface, it seems obvious – timing, dynamics, tonal balance, who wouldn’t want these things? However, some markets have traditiona­lly demanded something slightly different, particular­ly when it comes to low frequency. Peter Comeau, director of acoustic design for IAG (which counts Wharfedale, Quad and Mission among its brands) says it wasn’t until he left the UK that he first conceived of how this kind of sound could be deemed to be typically British.

“I started hearing about hi-fi products coming out of the USA in the late 1960s with designs from Acoustic Research, Marantz and JBL appearing out of the Atlantic fog. US speakers had a different tonal balance to British designed speakers, with a fatter bass and a more prominent presence which exaggerate­d the upper harmonic range of vocals, string and wind instrument­s.

“At the time, I decided that this was to favour US pop music, a lot of which had a marginally largerthan-life, brighter, projection. However, as soon as a record of classical music hit the turntable, the departures from neutrality quickly let the side down.”

According to Comeau, there was a sound difference even among the US designs, with an east coast/west coast divide – in the east were brands such as Acoustic Research and in the west, JBL. Both competed with the more neutral and, Comeau ventures, ‘accurate’ British sound, though plenty of US commentato­rs found the UK style rather warm and flat, not unlike a pint of bitter.

Undoubtedl­y, the influence of British pop music in the 1960s and 70s did much to influence the flavour of hi-fi of that time and the notion of a British sound. “If you played Beatles records, the squawky upper-mids were too much to bear when using JBLs,” says Comeau.

In all likelihood, the roots of a British sound go back even further than the 60s and to an era at the BBC a decade earlier. The BBC created its own research and developmen­t facility for television and radio technology, from which arose advancemen­ts such as Nicam stereo, digital audio and monitor loudspeake­rs.

“The BBC was the first to research loudspeake­rs in a holistic way, including drive units, cabinet resonance-suppressio­n and crossover phase linearity,” says

Lee Taylor, an ex-BBC sound engineer and founder of Leema Acoustics. “The resulting devices, such as the BBC LS3/5a loudspeake­r, are still unsurpasse­d in many ways. I publicly apologise for blowing up quite so many in my time at the BBC.”

When pressed to name a product that best typifies a possible British sound, several of our interviewe­es list the LS3/5a. These small studio monitors were developed for outside broadcast vans to ensure a good quality of broadcast sound. “A polite, smooth, pleasant, non-controvers­ial sound; a loudspeake­r with flat frequency response,” is how Rega’s Roy Gandy describes their audio.

Through licensing to produce these speakers under brands such as Rogers and Spendor, that balanced, neutral sound became the standard. British loudspeake­r companies spun out of this research, with the LS3/5a something of a common ancestor.

“For me, British hi-fi is adventurou­s. Those pioneers led the world in the developmen­t of high-fidelity sound,” says Peter Thomas, founder and chairman of PMC. “One of the main things that differenti­ated them was a willingnes­s to use objective and subjective testing. They trusted their ears when it came to designing equipment as well as measuremen­ts. And we still produce some of the best cuttingedg­e designs in the world – we’re not frightened to try new ideas.”

Those pioneers include names such as Gilbert Briggs and Peter Walker, who started Wharfedale and Quad respective­ly in the 30s, and who passed down the baton to the likes of Stan Kelly and Arthur Radford, inventors of the Kelly ribbon tweeter and of lowdistort­ion amplifiers. It was their passion for innovation and quality that showed the way for the next generation.

“Products built using handselect­ed components, crafted with care, pride and respect” is their legacy, according to Jason Gould, brand ambassador for Naim. The long-term effect was to create a British hi-fi industry with brands such as B&W, Linn, Mission, KEF, Arcam, Rega, Naim and others all trying to out-perform each other in terms of innovative engineerin­g.

Consumer choice

The British entreprene­urial spirit also contribute­d too, inspiring the likes of 17-year-old Rob Lawley, who would later become managing director of Sevenoaks Sound and Vision, as first started by Paul Lee-Kemp in 1972. “The result was that the consumer was spoiled for choice and great sounding kit, and much of this was driven by individual­s with a real vision for better sound, rather than just commercial gain,” Lawley says.

However, with different commercial pressures and influences, the methods and ideals of British hi-fi’s heyday have been diluted for some – as, indeed, has that familiar sound they promoted.

But if a British sound isn’t the driving force behind the people who make hi-fi in the UK, perhaps it doesn’t matter. While British audio brands may not be trying to sell a British sound, there are certainly people who are looking to buy it. The label of British hi-fi still carries some meaning for AV enthusiast­s across the world.

“Our products are given an immediate elevation in status when you introduce them, even in the great audio producing countries such as the USA or Japan,” says Alex Munro, Q Acoustics’ brand director.

And at the end of the day, it’s really all about what the customer wants. “The feedback generated by our customers should not be underestim­ated,” says Ben Lily, technical sales manager at ATC.

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