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Akg history – AKG Acoustics surround headphones User Manual

Page 4

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AKG history

“Pioneering spirit” best characterizes the ambitious work of AKG founders Dr.

Rudolf Görike and Ing. Ernst Pless. After the war, people went to the movies

seeking distraction from the stress of post-war life, so Rudolf Görike built movie

projectors and loudspeakers, while Ernst Pless used his rucksack and bicycle

to deliver the goods to constantly growing numbers of customers. Their very

first customer was unable to pay in cash so he settled the bill in food, fresh

from the black market.

When AKG was established in 1947, the company headquarters were located

in a basement in the suburbs of Vienna. Before long, many AKG microphones

were in use, mainly at radio stations, in the-

aters, on small stages, and at jazz clubs.

In the early 1950s, the two founders of AKG

made their business breakthrough with

completely new technologies. The micro-

phones of that era had a strangely shrill and

hollow sound, and AKG technology added warmth and fullness to microphone’s

sound.

In 1953, the first AKG dynamic microphone in the world became an interna-

tional success, and the first large-diaphragm condenser microphone with re-

motely selectable polar patterns set new standards for professional micro-

phones. Almost every major radio or recording studio including BBC London,

one of the first buyers, used these microphones.

The following years saw numerous new developments. Many innovations of

that period are still in use today. The K 10 headphones used by the European

Parliament are but one example.

AKG research engineers have always loved exotic challenges. One of those

was a real-life test of hydrophones for the Austrian deep-sea scientist Hans

Hass and AKG designers were happy to

spend days swimming and diving at the “Di-

ana Bad” indoor pool in downtown Vienna

that was very popular in those days. The

AKG team also fulfilled the very special

wishes of Herbert von Karajan. They had to

hide all the microphones at the first post-

war Salzburg Festival because the maestro had decreed that the audio equip-

ment must be totally invisible to the audience.

The company expanded and patents were applied for in rapid succession.

AKG supplied microphones to major tape recorder manufacturers including

Philips, Grundig, Uher, Loewe and others. Portable reverberation units created

a new market in the 1960s and 1970s. Telephone transducers soon became

a rapidly growing product line. This period also saw the advent of digital tech-

nology and AKG made its successful “digital debut” at the 1980 Olympic Games

in Moscow.

As early as 1974, AKG built the first wireless headphones. At that time, con-

sumers were skeptical and many felt the new technology was too complicated.

In the late 1980s, AKG launched the K 1000 headphones that were a dramatic

improvement over all earlier attempts at creating a natural, binaural headphone

sound. The audio community was full of praise. The new results of psychoa-

coustic research were presented in exhibitions at the Deutsches Museum in

Munich, the Kunst Museum of Bonn, and even used by the “Audimir” space

flight project. The crew on board the “MIR” performed several tests to exam-

ine the meaning of sound source localization for the humans in space.

The new AKG wireless microphone systems launched in 1996 used a new,

revolutionary technology that was widely acclaimed in the marketplace. Big

name pop artists such as Rod Steward, Peter Gabriel, and Simply Red used

the systems on their tours and AKG became the preferred brand for many other

famous musicians.

At the turn of the millennium, AKG engineers came up with the latest genera-

tion of the HEARO Family, a new line of wireless headphone systems using the

latest surround technology.

And the story goes on …

1947

1949

1953

1969

1991

1996

2001

2003

2004

1967

1978

1987