The HiFi Hobbyist Podcast

First anniversary special - personal reflections

39 min · 19. juni 2026
episode First anniversary special - personal reflections cover

Beskrivelse

Welcome to the first of two special Hi-Fi hobbyist podcasts that celebrate our first anniversary.   The first sets out to reflect how the global trends and issues discussed in the podcast have impacted my own experiences with Hi-Fi at home, and influenced my buying choices.   Discussions of my own personal experience with Hi-Fi are generally dealt with in the shorter opinion pieces that you will find on the Hi-Fi hobbyist.net [https://hifihobbyist.net] website.  However, for this anniversary special podcast, we will consider the elements within my main Hi-Fi system, which I refer to as my indulgent system, and reflect on how my buying choices are linked to the themes that I have explored over the last year of this podcast.   Only one of those components was produced by a manufacturer owned by one of my Hi-Fi heroes, and therefore, it seems appropriate to start with a discussion of my turntable, the Linn LP12, the product that launched the career of Ivor Tiefenbrun of Linn products.  With his well-known philosophy of source first, I hope he would agree!  The music accompanying this podcast was developed especially for it using Mureka AI software. It represents what AI thinks a baroque string quartet should sound like.   I'll let you decide if you agree!

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55 episoder

episode The Contribution of the BBC to Hi-Fi Part One cover

The Contribution of the BBC to Hi-Fi Part One

The BBC [https://bbc.co.uk] (British Broadcasting Corporation) was founded on October 18, 1922, as the British Broadcasting Company by a group of wireless manufacturers. It was later established as a public corporation under a Royal Charter on January 1, 1927, which is when it officially became the British Broadcasting Corporation, as it is still known today. Over the years, the BBC has made several significant contributions to the field of hi-fi audio. This podcast is the first of a series of three in which we will explore the contribution and influence of the BBC to British hi-fi and beyond. The music that accompanies this podcast reflects the BBC's long contribution to classical music, especially through its annual Proms season broadcast from the Royal Albert Hall annually by the BBC since 1927. They had started in 1895 under Robert Newman and conductor Henry Wood. Following Newman's death and financial struggles for the orchestra, the BBC took over the running and broadcasting of the concerts, initially from the Queens Hall. In 1941, the Queen's Hall was destroyed by an incendiary bomb during the Blitz, forcing the Proms to move to its iconic current home, the Royal Albert Hall. The BBC retains ownership of most of the Proms concerts, so we feature public domain versions of pieces of music associated with the Last night of the Proms from the musopen.org site, used under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 licence, together with historical performances from the Internet Archive in the Public domain. This podcast provides an overview of some of the BBC historical contributions. The next episode will focus specifically on BBC innovations in loudspeakers and digital audio, and the third will be a generated discussion of both podcasts In the first part of this podcast, we will consider the contribution of the BBC to audio engineering through its library of peer-reviewed engineering papers, which made a very significant contribution to transforming hi-fi from an art form guided by guesswork into a precise, repeatable science.

3. juli 202646 min
episode Anniversary reflections on the use of AI cover

Anniversary reflections on the use of AI

Welcome to the second of our anniversary special podcasts in the hi-fi hobbyist series.  Throughout the first year of the hi-fi hobbyist podcasts, we have explored the use of AI technology in a number of different ways. In most cases, the podcasts have alternated in style on a fortnightly cycle.  The first podcast in the cycle is based on human-authored content. AI is used to turn the words into audio content using a synthesised version of the Hi-Fi hobbyist's voice, as is the case here.   The accompanying music is either from public-domain historical sources, often the case when classical music is used, or from AI-generated music in other genres.  The second podcast in each pair has often taken the form of an AI-generated debate about the content of the previous week's podcast. This debate is carefully steered by the hifi hobbyist, but where there are flaws occasionally, these are left in, in the interests of transparency.  This anniversary special represents a partnership between the human hi-fi hobbyist and the technology. In the first part of this podcast, the hi-fi hobbyist lays out how AI has been used over the year. This is followed by an exposition of the ethics of using AI in the ways described. After this, the podcast concludes with an AI-generated debate about these same ethical issues.  The music to accompany this podcast is generated using Mureka AI software and is in the style of piano ragtime from the 1920s

26. juni 202637 min
episode First anniversary special - personal reflections cover

First anniversary special - personal reflections

Welcome to the first of two special Hi-Fi hobbyist podcasts that celebrate our first anniversary.   The first sets out to reflect how the global trends and issues discussed in the podcast have impacted my own experiences with Hi-Fi at home, and influenced my buying choices.   Discussions of my own personal experience with Hi-Fi are generally dealt with in the shorter opinion pieces that you will find on the Hi-Fi hobbyist.net [https://hifihobbyist.net] website.  However, for this anniversary special podcast, we will consider the elements within my main Hi-Fi system, which I refer to as my indulgent system, and reflect on how my buying choices are linked to the themes that I have explored over the last year of this podcast.   Only one of those components was produced by a manufacturer owned by one of my Hi-Fi heroes, and therefore, it seems appropriate to start with a discussion of my turntable, the Linn LP12, the product that launched the career of Ivor Tiefenbrun of Linn products.  With his well-known philosophy of source first, I hope he would agree!  The music accompanying this podcast was developed especially for it using Mureka AI software. It represents what AI thinks a baroque string quartet should sound like.   I'll let you decide if you agree!

19. juni 202639 min
episode The Debate: Roy Gandy versus Ivor Tiefenbrun cover

The Debate: Roy Gandy versus Ivor Tiefenbrun

This week's podcast concludes our current series of podcasts about my Hi-Fi Heroes [https://hifihobbyist.net/2026/04/25/hifi-heroes-peter-walker-of-quad/]. We have prompted our AI protagonists to debate the relative contributions of our two most recent Hi-Fi Heroes,Roy Gandy of Rega and Ivor Tiefenbrun of Linn.  These two highly influential figures have both led their respective businesses for over fifty years since the early 1970s, and although they have both stepped back from day-to-day management, they are both still heavily involved in their businesses.  Both made their names with iconic turntables, but have diversified in different ways.  The music this week has been created by the Hi-Fi Hobbyist, using Mureka AI software [https://mureka.ai]in a jazz and swing style.  I hope that you enjoy the debate!

12. juni 202634 min
episode HiFi Heroes: Roy Gandy of Rega cover

HiFi Heroes: Roy Gandy of Rega

This week's podcast is devoted to out final Hi-Fi hero [https://hifihobbyist.net/2026/04/25/hifi-heroes-peter-walker-of-quad/] for now, Roy Gandy.   Roy Gandy founded Rega Research [https://rega.co.uk/] in 1973. It is a prominent British audio manufacturer celebrated for its minimalist engineering philosophy and high-fidelity equipment, which has always combined excellence with good value.  The company has evolved from building the original Planet turntable in 1973 to developing its modern flagship, the Naia, which uses advanced materials like graphene and titanium to achieve extreme rigidity and low mass.  Beyond record players, the company is recognized for influential electronics like the Brio integrated amplifier, a compact unit praised for its authentic analogue performance.  Gandy’s design approach views the turntable as a vibration measuring machine, prioritising mechanical integrity and musicality over superfluous digital features. He has always claimed not to be very interested in the concept of high fidelity that “seems a bit strange” to him, but acknowledges that he is passionate about music, and fixing things that seem wrong to him.  To preserve Rega’s corporate culture and ensure long-term stability, Gandy recently transitioned the business into an Employee Ownership Trust. He has provided a legacy of technical innovation rooted in a lifelong passion for accuracy in music reproduction, and created a remarkable British company with a loyal and caring workforce.  This podcast starts by considering his early years.  In recognition of his mother’s talent as a concert pianist, the music accompanying the podcast is Beethoven’s Piano Sonata No. 14, the Moonlight, played by Arthur Rubinstein, and provided in the public domain by the Internet Archive.

5. juni 202641 min