The HiFi Hobbyist Podcast

AI discussion of Gilbert Briggs ongoing contribution to British Hi-Fi

41 min · 22. maj 2026
episode AI discussion of Gilbert Briggs ongoing contribution to British Hi-Fi cover

Description

This week’s podcast features a discussion about the impact of Gilbert Briggs on the development of the British Hi-Fi scene between two AI protagonists. They have been prompted to  compare Briggs’s contribution with another of my Hi-Fi heroes, Peter Walker, founder of QUAD, and to consider Briggs's legacy for modern-day Hi-Fi loudspeakers in general and Wharfedale in particular. As Gilbert Briggs was a keen musician who loved his pianos, as well as an engineer, we have chosen a piano accompaniment for this week's discussion. We feature extracts from Mussorgsky’s original version of Pictures at an Exhibition for solo piano recorded by Sviatoslav Richter somewhere in the U.S.S.R. sometime in the 1950s, during Gilbert Briggs's heyday, and downloaded from the Internet Archive, and used under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 licence.  We hope you enjoy the discussion!

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56 episodes

episode The Contribution of the BBC to Hi Fi Part Two artwork

The Contribution of the BBC to Hi Fi Part Two

In this podcast, the second of a miniseries of three, we shall discuss the BBC’s contribution in three specific areas: loudspeaker design, digital audio and nurturing audio engineering talent.  The music that accompanies this podcast once again reflects the BBC's long contribution to classical music.   The BBC retains ownership of most of the Proms concerts, so we feature a public domain recording of selections from Faure’s Requiem, a piece of music that I first heard performed at the Royal Albert Hall in 1982 as part of the BBC Proms season.   This recording is from 1962 and is sourced from Wikimedia Commons, featuring the Orchestre national de l'Opéra de Monte-Carlo with the Louis Frémaux Chorale, Philippe Caillard, and Bernard Kruysen.  This sound recording is out of copyright because it was published in the European Union more than 50 years ago, and the rights of its performers and producers have expired under European Directive 2006/116/EC.  In the first part of this podcast, we will consider the contribution of the BBC to audio engineering through its groundbreaking loudspeaker designs

Yesterday36 min
episode The Contribution of the BBC to Hi-Fi Part One artwork

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 artwork

Anniversary reflections on the use of AI

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

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

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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