Description

A story about Barns, 1 Chair, Boy's Toy's and Friends

I have come to think that the audio über alles types get restless after awhile with any component. Once they either get used to its sound or can identify its failings, they require a change of sonic scenery in order to get their “fix.” It’s not the music that counts, it’s the sensation evoked by its sonic architecture.” (TAS 119 1999 HP)

Gentlemen! (As there seem to be not that many ladies, surprise surprise).

Time has come to discuss the concept of "the one chair affair".

I for one had always thought that enjoying music in the broadest sense was a multiple affair not a solitary thing.

With amazement I have been reviewing correspondence between people that seem to hide away in barns and basements in order to get their daily “fix” of discussing the toy’s of the boy’s and fiddling with cables all night. All I read is about pieces of equipment, cables and hardware. Every month a new speaker or a new amp, not even one word about the software except data of the quantity.

Where did you guys go wrong?

If it’s about your toys then you are only Hi-Fi nerds and the nerds are killing, in my opinion, the industry. It should be about the music and the emotion music can deliver. It is not a solitary thing it is a thing you should experience with multiple. The hardware is in my view only the means.

I played in bands and orchestra’s for years and “the magic” happens where there is emotional interaction. Not interaction between apparatus but between people.

These “one chair barn and basement rooms” are the perfect example of boys with their toy’s and the ONE CHAIR affair. No signs of the together. I can imagine the dance around the ONE CHAIR that will give you the utter “sweet-spot” experience.

Look at the aesthetics and atmosphere of the “one chair barn and basement rooms”. We can differ about taste and things are subjective but most “barn and basement rooms” have not one single element that would attract a music loving person ready to share the experience of communicating music.

For me this fits the discussion starting slowly in TAS about what the absolute sound is all about. Should a High-End system communicate the emotional expression as intended and recorded by the musicians or should a system be able to retrieve every little

detail and be so analytical that you can tell what is the make of the car passing outside the Amsterdam Concertgebouw.

Gentlemen, it’s all about the transfer of emotion. Remove your ONE CHAIR and invite 50 people in you barn or basement rooms. Put on some ass-kicking music and have a party. You’ll love it. (And go to work fully revamped the next morning)

Ps: Do not forget to invite your family since without them your barn or basement is not a home right?

(But then one Mr. Zappa had a different opinion about home: Home is where the heart is )

The Eames Lounge Chair:

An Icon of Modern Design

May 18 – September 3, 2006

The culmination of Charles and Ray Eames’s experimentation in molded plywood, the 1955 Eames Lounge Chair represents the epitome of both modernist style and luxurious comfort. The exhibition examines this icon of modern design through a dynamic installation including prototype models, drawings, advertisements, and an “exploded” version of the chair that breaks down its components. Through these materials, the Eames Lounge Chair will be fully explored in terms of its technical design, production, and promotion. Examples of other Eames designs will provide a context for the profound impact of this classic chair on subsequent furniture and its lasting legacy fifty years later.

In an advertisement from 1961, Herman Miller Furniture Company, the manufacturer of the Eames Lounge Chair, posed the question, “Why so much fuss over a chair?” This is precisely the question that The Eames Lounge Chair: An Icon of Modern Design will answer by examining how this construction in molded-plywood, leather, and metal has come to take on iconic status in the world of modern design.
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Components Toggle details

    • A house is not a home
    Home?
    • The room
    in progress
    • The view
    confrontation
    • Equipment rack
    one size fits all
    • A 3 penny radio
    Building a Three-Penny Radio.

    A crystal radio is nice because it needs no power, and the materials can all be home-made or at least found around the house. But the crystal radio needs a big antenna, and a good ground, and so is not very portable.

    To get away with using a much smaller, portable antenna, we will need to amplify the tiny signal it receives. This requires a portable power supply, such as a battery.

    Our next toy is a portable radio. It can be powered from a tiny 1.5 volt battery, or from a battery made from copper wire and aluminum foil sitting in a glass of lemonade, a soft drink, or a beer, or by a few small commercial solar cells.

    The heart of the radio is a special 10 transistor integrated circuit in a tiny three-legged bit of plastic. This circuit comes ready-made with several amplifiers, the detector, and an Automatic Gain Control circuit that boosts the level of faint stations to match the strong ones, so no volume control is needed. The final radio has excellent performance, pulling in weak stations, and preventing nearby strong stations from overwhelming the weak ones next to them on the dial.

    We call the radio a
    • basic powerplant
    the ultimate
    • legalize party
    do it
    • ADDITORS Medium
    The Eames Chair:

    The Perfect Chair!!!!!! (but it will not massage your back)

    To overcome the blocking effect of the headrest, cut yourself some BIG paper ear-supplements and attach them to your born-with protruding elements.
    You’ll be amazed about the additional micro-infested low-level detail these ADDITORS will provide. No specific instructions for these ADDITORS exist but make sure they are proportional to your speakers and room. BIG speakers means BIG ADDITORS, small room
    SMALL ADDITORS and family room: MULTIPLE ADDITORS for all members.

    Take care

Comments 17

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Enjoyed browsing "Houses at Sagaponac". Some of the projects seem contrived, cases in point, the Steven Harris house is derivative of Philip Johnson's residence, and the Michael Graves house looks like it was bought off the shelf at Target, perfectly expressive of the owner. The Rogers, Phifer and Hadid residences, on the other hand, are original and interesting. I hope more will be built. The Eames chair may be an icon (I'm sitting in mine, listening to music as I write), but in terms of comfort, Ikea Poang wins by a country mile. Too bad there are so few examples of chairs / sofas combining good design and comfort. I would buy them.

Scott

skushino