ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022READ ONLY FORUM
This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022
KMA
B&O product history since 1991: Ridiculously long to list in a signature.
Have to agree with this. I would however happily buy a Geoff Martin branded speaker knowing it would be great!
Peter
You make several accurate and cogent points. Especially the one about how David Lewis was the heart of B&O, forcing engineers to make his designs sound as good as possible, which was a successful approach. During his years they produced many iconic products that not only were beautiful but sonically very good to extremely good. Now it seems to be engineering then passed off to the designers with instructions to wrap a halfway pretty wrapper around it. I agree with you, while Geoff Martin is a talented engineer, none of the new speakers are particularly attractive, especially as compared with the previous generation of Lewis designs. But, the thing is, there are many well engineered and sonically good products out there from other manufacturers, what I have respected B&O for and why I bought them is the combination of design and performance I got nowhere else. I had owned plenty of high performance gear before, but never good looking high performance gear.
To me, the BL5 was an amazing product, such stunning performance coupled with such radical and beautiful design. Even if the BL50 sounds much better, Jesus is it Ugly to me, it looks like an oversized space heater/room air filter with a pop up turkey timer on top, none of the grace and elegance of the BL5. And it's by no means sure that the well heeled audiophiles will flock to buy the BL90 and 50, as they want more tweakability (different amps and cables for their fetish) and have a long history of looking down their noses at B&O that will be a hard thing for B&O to overcome.
The Beovisions have gone steadily downhill after the BV12/11. Play has had a lot of issues with bad networking and the fact you see the product line churn so rapidly means that despite making money they don't have a cohesive vision. From Beolit 12 to 15 to 17 in how many years? The Moment is still a very troubled product.
B&O faces a difficult enough time as the whole consumer electronics market is in flux and changing due to how people live and access music and video now, and in my opinion they are not rising to the challenge. They are acting like a company run by trendy MBA types with good speaker engineers, not a design focused, devoted, visionary firm anymore. Which upsets me as they were the only company who did what they did, they were unique.
Time will tell where this goes. They have had near death experiences before, but it seems different and more serious now.
Jeff
I'm afraid I'm recovering from the BeoVirus.
Something I forgot to include. B&O has many products in the Museum Of Modern Art...which of the current products can you imagine seeing there now?
The moment
I love a person with a sense of humor!
This is a great thread and I can't really add much (though I'll give it good go!) as it has already been said very eloquently by KMA and Jeff.
Like Peter, I am in full agreement with KMA, and the points you raise about current products being tweaked products of the past, I too have mentioned several times in previous months. There are no new designs apart form the Shape (which is great and is B&O in my opinion and the BL90s, which are nice, but not quite as striking as the BL5s albeit acosutically superior. I agree with Peter about the BL5s. I love this product as the design is unlike anything else out there, quite marvellous and striking.
Jeff, x 100!
Your comment about the heater and turkey made me laugh SO LOUD! Its past midnight here in the UK, I am on my laptop in my bedroom and I burst out laughing so much probably waking up half the street in the process! Thanks for that!! The funny thing is that I agree with you completely! You offer a perfect description. I really don't like the look of the BL50s at all and wonder how the design even got accepted by higher management? I think the wrong people are now employed by B&O. They really have lost focus in so many areas. Are they actively looking for new talent? There must be so many up and coming David Lewis proteges out there just waiting for a chance to be heard. My instincts tell me that B&O are so full of pride and caught up in their own arrogance that they don't even give these young people a chance. Please someone tell me I am wrong!
B&O products are V1-32, BS2, H95, E8 and an Essence remote.11-46 now replaced with Sony A90J 65”, Sony HT-A9, Sony UBP-X800M2 and Sony SRS-NS7.
New: Beovision Harmony, Beolab 50's, Beolab 28's, Beolab 18's, Beolab 17's, Beosound Stage & LG, Beosound 2, Beoplay M3, Beoplay A1, Beoplay Portal, Beoplay H4 gen 2, Beoplay E8 3.0
Mikipedia on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/Mikipedia
Mikipedi4 on Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/mikipedi4
Mikipedia on Intagram: https://www.instagram.com/mikipedi4/
Old: Beosound 9000 mk3, Beolab 3's, Beovision Eclipse, Beolab 1's, Beolab 2, Beovision 10-46, Overture 2300, beolab 8000's, Beolab 4000's, Beovision avant 32" etc. etc.
Barry Santini:The latest BL90 & BL 50 are LIGHTYEARS AHEAD OF the iconic older units. Their design language is as yet unfamiliar to fans. I for one luv them Barry
Mikipedia:To me it feels like there are still good designers at b&o, but there is no design overlord if you will.
In addition to everything that's been said in this thread which I agree with, I'd like to piggyback on the comment quoted above... there's no cohesive design language either, of the current B&O products. I think there are materials decision being made... wood, etc. but there doesn't seem to be a thread of commonality beyond that. In the David Lewis era, one saw the design familial relationships between the products, each of them had a special look and feel that not only made them different, but they shared a common design language. Todays B&O seems to be lacking in that common thread. Each product is on its own island of sorts.
"Audiophiles" always seem(ed) to say that B&O was more form over function - and we bristle(d) at that accusation... perhaps now that B&O is showing more function over form, we all yearn for something more in that "form." c'est la vie.
Speakers: I don't particularly like the look of the BL50s, I can't say I like the look of the BL90s either. They're big. But with the audio processing they're doing and the sonic achievements inside them, maybe they HAVE to have big homely casings. At least with the 90s the "shrouded" look is a bit elegant.
Televisions: The Eclipse is, well, a rectangle over a square (one can only do so much with a television's design anyway). I do, however like the wooden fret option for the BV14 / 11.
To me it feels like there are still good designers at b&o, but there is no design overlord if you will. And to me it seems like that is badly needed when as a company you make so many products that are meant to work together and quite often in the same space too. It feels like a lack of cohesion and therefor no one disigner can push the engineers and it becomes a bit of a shoving match. B&o is still craftsmanship, but it seems to be done a bit on autopilot designwise. I still have much irrational love for the company though, but i gues that is what love is
While we disagree on the new designs, you find them more attractive than I do, that's a matter of taste and your opinion is as valid as mine on that! Which is good that not everyone is as down on the designs as I am! But you do hit on an extremely valid and important point, in the Jacob Jensen days, and in the David Lewis days, B&O had a very unified design language, you could mix and match their products from several lines successfully and have it look very much all of a piece design wise. I feel they have lost that today, to their disadvantage, and you make a very astute observation that I quite agree with but wasn't able to put into words as eloquently. You could even mix and match the later Jensen stuff with the Lewis stuff successfully, my Beogram looks great sitting next to my BS9000 and BL9s. But lately...I don't find an integrated design language outside of a few products, as in the BV14 and how well it worked with the BL18s.
Sorry KMA & Jeff, I was writing my post and when it came online, I saw that you both had just a few moments earlier posted the same thing - Great minds think alike! :-)
I was just recently thinking about how it seems B&O products haven't been becoming icons lately. What comes to mind are the flagship music systems. The BeoSound 2300 and the BeoSound 9000 are clearly icons of B&O. However, what about the subsequent flagship music systems? The BeoCenter 2 is GORGEOUS and certainly should have become an icon. Yet, B&O failed to keep it updated and relevant -- such as fitting it with a blu-ray player. The BeoSound 5 was hugely expensive. Now, it's terribly dated and repairs are outrageous. I was just quoted $1900 USD to replace the motherboard! Therefore, it's not even worth repairing. Now, the flagship is the Moment. It's been months and B&O haven't addressed the issue of never-ending harvesting and disappearing DLNA music. I certainly don't see the Moment as becoming an icon of B&O.
I went to the Moma site and found what they listed with a search. Probably more in certain exhibits but this was what I found quickly:
David Lewis:Cona SubwoferBeolab 6000Beocord VX 5000Form 2 headphones (Steve McGugan)Jacob Jensen:Beogram 6000Beomaster 1200Beocenter 7000Beomic 2000Beomaster 6000Beolit 400Beovox 2700Beogram 4002Beogram 4000Beomaster 3000-2Beovox 3700Beogram 1200Beolit 1000
Just as a reference point as to what some others have thought design classics. Personally I think the Beocenter 9500, Beosound 9000, Beolab 5, and Beolab 8000s are all iconic.
Jeff:I went to the Moma site and found what they listed with a search. Probably more in certain exhibits but this was what I found quickly: David Lewis: Cona Subwofer Beolab 6000 Beocord VX 5000 Form 2 headphones (Steve McGugan) Jacob Jensen: Beogram 6000 Beomaster 1200 Beocenter 7000 Beomic 2000 Beomaster 6000 Beolit 400 Beovox 2700 Beogram 4002 Beogram 4000 Beomaster 3000-2 Beovox 3700 Beogram 1200 Beolit 1000 Just as a reference point as to what some others have thought design classics. Personally I think the Beocenter 9500, Beosound 9000, Beolab 5, and Beolab 8000s are all iconic. Jeff Beovirus victim, it's gotten to be too much to list!
beojeff: I was just recently thinking about how it seems B&O products haven't been becoming icons lately. What comes to mind are the flagship music systems. The BeoSound 2300 and the BeoSound 9000 are clearly icons of B&O. However, what about the subsequent flagship music systems? The BeoCenter 2 is GORGEOUS and certainly should have become an icon. Yet, B&O failed to keep it updated and relevant -- such as fitting it with a blu-ray player. The BeoSound 5 was hugely expensive. Now, it's terribly dated and repairs are outrageous. I was just quoted $1900 USD to replace the motherboard! Therefore, it's not even worth repairing. Now, the flagship is the Moment. It's been months and B&O haven't addressed the issue of never-ending harvesting and disappearing DLNA music. I certainly don't see the Moment as becoming an icon of B&O.
Oh beojeff you have taken the words right out of my mouth! One of my biggest disappointments with B&O has been that they did not update the BeoCentre 2. I think this is definitely a design icon product - I love it! Surely they could keep this wonderful design and update it to Blu-Ray and/or 4k? Why would they not do this? I am lost!
You also mention the BeoSound 2300, which is my favourite B&O product ever, and the very first I owned! The amazing moving glass when you reached out towards it! NOBODY else had products like this. B&O were years ahead and set a real benchmark.
The BeoLink 7000 was the very first product that ever caught my attention and introduced me to the brand. A remote control that lifted up towards you when you placed it on a flat service! AMAZING!
What I simply can't 'compute' is how B&O don't recognise (at all its seems) that THESE are the magical things that people love about the brand and why we buy into it. WE WANT SOMETHING DIFFERENT! On the one hand I want to ask, "How do we get this message across?" but on the other hand, I am thinking, "But we shouldn't have to! Surely B&O know exactly why people buy their products!" What on earth is going on?!!!
Mikipedia:- If you wall mount(high up, cornered)the bl17's the bang and olufsen logo on the speakers themselves if upside down, what the actual #*&@.
Yes, I saw that too, and I saw it on the pictures from the B&O website !
The user positionable logo on the BS Shape avoid this issue, fortunately
BAND'OH!:What I simply can't 'compute' is how B&O don't recognise (at all its seems) that THESE are the magical things that people love about the brand and why we buy into it.
The pop up tweeters of the emperor penguins is certainly a (shy) proof that B&O is aware of that, isn't it ?
And I completely agree about the BC2 !
For some time now I have believed that the future for B&O is in speakers and audio distribution only.
It has been blatantly obvious for many years now, with flat panel TV's, the ability to be stylish and different is extremely limited to the point that to do it becomes almost contrived. All manufacturers offer metal surrounds or else almost invisible surrounds, full integration with the outside world (or else a small inexpensive box can add any omission) and a variety of stand options (easel, tripod etc.) and would not look out of place in any furnishing or architectural magazine shoot. Samsung recently introduced a solid aluminium remote which gets great reviews and is mentioned in the same breath as B&O's own.There is absolutely nowhere to go and no justification in taking someone else's TV and claiming it as your own when, at even the most cursory glance, it is so obvious what you a trying to do and at an unacceptably high premium.
For audio systems, at the point the requirement for a mechanical player was removed the deal was sealed, the opportunity for B&O magic was all but removed. The BS5 wheels were lovely but useless at navigating a large collection and the Moment was the audio systems "Eclipse moment" whereby the tried to pass off a £100 Android tablet as a bespoke audio system.
What is required is a (bugfree) flexible audio connection hub that can accept and distribute all modern audio formats and a range of stylish, distinctively B&O speakers to cover the range from Sonos equivalent upwards. A significant push should be aimed at the young professional class rather than the close to retirement company directors. If they can't command a decent chunk of the upcoming Apple speaker's market and they are left only to sell BL50's & 90's then I fear for their future.
Ban boring signatures!
Puncher: What is required is a (bugfree) flexible audio connection hub that can accept and distribute all modern audio formats and a range of stylish, distinctively B&O speakers to cover the range from Sonos equivalent upwards. A significant push should be aimed at the young professional class rather than the close to retirement company directors. If they can't command a decent chunk of the upcoming Apple speaker's market and they are left only to sell BL50's & 90's then I fear for their future.
They have. It's called BeoPlay!
moxxey:They have. It's called BeoPlay!
Puncher: For some time now I have believed that the future for B&O is in speakers and audio distribution only. It has been blatantly obvious for many years now, with flat panel TV's, the ability to be stylish and different is extremely limited to the point that to do it becomes almost contrived. All manufacturers offer metal surrounds or else almost invisible surrounds, full integration with the outside world (or else a small inexpensive box can add any omission) and a variety of stand options (easel, tripod etc.) and would not look out of place in any furnishing or architectural magazine shoot. Samsung recently introduced a solid aluminium remote which gets great reviews and is mentioned in the same breath as B&O's own.There is absolutely nowhere to go and no justification in taking someone else's TV and claiming it as your own when, at even the most cursory glance, it is so obvious what you a trying to do and at an unacceptably high premium. For audio systems, at the point the requirement for a mechanical player was removed the deal was sealed, the opportunity for B&O magic was all but removed. The BS5 wheels were lovely but useless at navigating a large collection and the Moment was the audio systems "Eclipse moment" whereby the tried to pass off a £100 Android tablet as a bespoke audio system. What is required is a (bugfree) flexible audio connection hub that can accept and distribute all modern audio formats and a range of stylish, distinctively B&O speakers to cover the range from Sonos equivalent upwards. A significant push should be aimed at the young professional class rather than the close to retirement company directors. If they can't command a decent chunk of the upcoming Apple speaker's market and they are left only to sell BL50's & 90's then I fear for their future.
Have to agree with much of this. I think that the only option left in the television field is a high quality motorised stand with sound bar onto which any TV panel can be mounted. The PUC control being put into the sound bar. The Eclipse almost does this but it is specific to one LG panel and for a silly price.
Graham
moxxey: Puncher: What is required is a (bugfree) flexible audio connection hub that can accept and distribute all modern audio formats and a range of stylish, distinctively B&O speakers to cover the range from Sonos equivalent upwards. A significant push should be aimed at the young professional class rather than the close to retirement company directors. If they can't command a decent chunk of the upcoming Apple speaker's market and they are left only to sell BL50's & 90's then I fear for their future. They have. It's called BeoPlay!
Sorry but no - a lot of beoplay stuff has been third party sourced, disjointed, short term stuff (I'll stop short of calling it worse) - it is not what I would expect of b&o.
StUrrock:It is my understanding that BeoPlay will cease to exist after this xmas.
vlohjr1:So everything in beoplay range is discontinued[:\'(]?
If thats true then I sincerely hope the plan isn't just to rebrand the play stuff as "full" b&o, at that point I will enter discussions with the Trading Standards authorities!
vikinger:Have to agree with much of this. I think that the only option left in the television field is a high quality motorised stand with sound bar onto which any TV panel can be mounted. The PUC control being put into the sound bar. The Eclipse almost does this but it is specific to one LG panel and for a silly price. Graham
StUrrock: moxxey: They have. It's called BeoPlay! It is my understanding that BeoPlay will cease to exist after this xmas.
moxxey: They have. It's called BeoPlay!
It is my understanding that BeoPlay will cease to exist after this xmas.
This can't be right.. Why do they release new products (still more to come), and new colours?
Where do you get this information from??
Normann:This can't be right.. Why do they release new products (still more to come), and new colours? Where do you get this information from??
StUrrock:A dealer friend of mine said he thinks that the BeoPlay name will disappear as the BeoPlay products are integrated back into the main line of products.
I we are talking iconic, i think the following should also be added:
BeoVision MX (such a radical departure from previous CRT TV design)
BeoVision Avant (original CRT version)
BeoSystem 2300/2500 (and successors)
Beolink 1000 and successor Beo4 (BR One is an fairly bland compared to these)
If B&O is reabsorbing Play products into the main brand that is scary, there was a rationale for keeping the low end stuff separate. Integrating it, especially as a fair amount of the Play stuff has had very problematic quality and performance issues, is a fairly risky strategy, and seems to indicate their entire business model is shrinking/imploding.
How come? Do you mean it will shift to the regular B&O branding?
moxxey:How come? Do you mean it will shift to the regular B&O branding?