Don't miss the six HIFI courses, given by Gerard Rejskind

HIFI Ring

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Blog
  • Glossary
  • No products in cart.

HIFI course
0
admin
Saturday, 01 February 2020 / Published in blog, HIFI course

Part One:
Introduction to high fidelity

(NOTE: This section and the ones linked to it are excerpts from Gerard Rejskind’s best-selling book, The World of High Fidelity)

    In 1990, along with some colleagues, I wrote a book called The UHF Guide to Ultra High Fidelity. It was intended to be a product subsidiary to our main activity, which is publishing UHF Magazine. I wasn’t prepared for the wave of success which met its appearance. It earned back its production costs in a mere six weeks, and became a best seller. And that was before it appeared in book stores, when we were selling it exclusively through ads in the magazines.
     
Mere numbers don’t tell the whole story, as they usually do not. Countless readers write to tell us that this book, which is supposed to be a mere technical book, had changed their lives. Many readers who had bought it ordered extra copies for friends. Some manufacturers ordered cases of it to give to their employees. In short, I had every reason to be happy we had done it.
But it wasn’t long before I was being asked whether we would do anothe
r book. Yes we would, I said, making no commitment to a publication date. But I didn’t want to turn out merely an updated edition. Wasn’t there a lot we hadn’t said in the first book? Of course there was. Enough to fill a second book? At least.
Make no mistake, this is not merely a rewrite of the older book. Every word in this one is new, having appeared neither in the first book nor in the magazine.
Finding material was easy. Plenty of topics were merely glanced at in the first book…acoustics for instance. Others were dealt with in too little detail. And I know from our huge mail load that there are things we haven’t fully explained, that many (most?) of our readers do not understand. This book is intended to help. It will help you read our magazine more easily, and indeed it will help you read other audio magazines more easily.
You’ll find, however, that over four years separating the two books, our tone has barely shifted. We were and remain iconoclasts. Over a dozen years of the magazine’s existence, we have checked out for ourselves many of the most trusted principles of audio. We have discovered that many of them are simply not so. Believing them is costly.
It remains a fact that most famous-name equipment is deliberately built to perform poorly.
It is also true that some astonishingly expensive esoteric equipment just doesn’t cut it.
Fortunately, it also remains true even today that real music can be heard from a system that is, by hi-fi standards, inexpensive.
You won’t see many brand names in this book, because that’s the province of the magazine. The book deals in ideas. If some of those ideas shock you, I invite you to do what we’ve done: check them out for yourself.
This book, unlike the first one, contains no previously-published material. Thus it is all from my pen. I have, of course, drawn heavily on the knowledge of a number of people, some of whom write for UHF and some of whom do not. I thank them all, but any errors in this book are my own.

GO TO PART TWO

Gerard Rejskind

What you can read next

Beat Solo 4 Wireless Headphones
Beat Solo 4 Wireless Review
Richard Hardesty
Model C Music System from Steinway Lyngdorf
$148,000 Model C Music System from Steinway Lyngdorf

Recent Posts

  • Assembling your GutWire B12 power cord

    For the assembly you will need a sharp knife or...
  • High-end speaker cable

    High-End Speaker Cables

    High-End Speaker Cables Nothing in high-end aud...
  • beats-solo3-wireless-headphones

    Top Features of Beats Solo3 Wireless

    If you’re looking for high-quality wirele...
  • HIFI audio gears

    Gustard A26 MQA DAC: A Top Choice

    When it comes to premium audio equipment, the G...
  • Beats Studio Pro x Kim Kardashian

    Beats Studio Pro x Kim Kardashian by Dr Dre

    The Beats Studio Pro x Kim Kardashian headphone...
  • hifi gears

    Top Hi-Fi Network Receiver for Audiophiles

    The Yamaha R-N2000A is a standout in the world ...
  • Beat Solo 4 Wireless Headphones

    Beat Solo 4 Wireless Review

    The Beat Solo 4 Wireless Headphones in matte bl...
  • Ultra HIFI headphones

    Beats Pro Headphones: A Deep Dive

    If you’re an audiophile, you know that fi...

Featured Posts

  • Assembling your GutWire B12 power cord

    0 comments
  • High-end speaker cable

    High-End Speaker Cables

    0 comments
  • beats-solo3-wireless-headphones

    Top Features of Beats Solo3 Wireless

    0 comments
  • HIFI audio gears

    Gustard A26 MQA DAC: A Top Choice

    0 comments
  • Beats Studio Pro x Kim Kardashian

    Beats Studio Pro x Kim Kardashian by Dr Dre

    0 comments
  • hifi gears

    Top Hi-Fi Network Receiver for Audiophiles

    0 comments
  • Beat Solo 4 Wireless Headphones

    Beat Solo 4 Wireless Review

    0 comments
  • Ultra HIFI headphones

    Beats Pro Headphones: A Deep Dive

    0 comments
ULTRA HIFI AUDIO

DISCLOSURE

HiFiRing is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC and eBay Associates Program and other affiliate advertising programs designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to products on their respective website. If you purchase an item after clicking on a link here, we will get a small commission and YOU WON'T PAY MORE. Furthermore, if you buy ANYTHING even not related to this site's topic within 24 hours following an affiliate link from this site, we will still get a commission. This is the best way to help us keep up this site with good information for audiophiles.

High end audio equipment

Privacy Policy |                     Website Creation by:  website creation

TOP