Bose 901 Review Well Done.


hersch8888

I am curious if anyone remembers the 901 demos back in "the day."  One very impressive demo to prove the durability of 901s was to take pure AC right from the wall outlet to the inputs of the 901s.  Flip the switch and "BRRRRRRR" for a half a second.  Then, the sales rep would exclaim: "270 watts!!"

We've heard the "popular" comments from the competitors: "No highs, no lows ...".  Here's another, when prompted: "They sound great.  As long as you don't try to play music through them."

Quick 901 story:

We have a second home on a lake.  Across the cove, about 50 years away is a nice(r) home with the beautiful boat house.  My neighbor (we'll call him "Tim") knows he has the most expensive and elegant home in the cove -- and, the most awesome stereo.  "Tim" often blurs the definition of a "subdivision" and inserts "resort" and "party central" into the classification.  "Tim's" stereo is made up of a big boy Pioneer SX1280, and 901s.  So far, so good.  Except .... the Bose 901s are hanging in the corners with the faces pointed towards "Tim" and his guests.  In theory, this seems viable.  In reality, not so much.  The 901s hang UNDER the soffits of the boathouse.  So, when it's party time at the "Tim Resort" he cranks up the music loud enough to satisfy his "louder ... LOUDER" guests, totally numb to the fact that 89% of the sound is being "shared" with the rest of us.  Anyone who has spent time on a lake knows how sound reflective water is.  This is the ultimate execution of Bose Noise-Cancelling principle.  It cancels ALL sounds in my vicinity and replaces them with "Tim's" playlist for the evening.  This would be somewhat tolerable if I were a strong advocate of "Tim's" choice of music genre.  I'd scratch my fingernails on a chalkboard, but no one would hear.

 

They came out just as my HiFi journey began, in 1968.  I was initiated in the AR/KLH/Dynaco sector of the audiosphere, and went to the Grand Central listening room to hear the 32Hz organ pipe (overtones) of Also Sprach Zarathustra played in a room far too small to support such a wavelength. Later, I heard a pair of Series IIs reproduce a live recording of the West Point marching band through a pair of MC-2300s, and THAT sure was cool.  But as I learned more about audio I came to dismiss them as High Fidelity…especially after the Series III were introduced.  Truthfully, I haven’t tried any of them in a long while.  I credit Bose with several positive contributions to the audio field…popularizing the concept of subwoofers, noise cancelling headphone technology, and the Lifestyle Jewel Cube w/AdaptIQ.  But his genius was always the marketing of a fundamentally fraudulent notion, using the prestige of his MIT position to make bank. Not a fan of that.

Apparently, they are re-releasing the 901's, they look so good!

https://www.gearpatrol.com/audio/bose-901-speaker-kith/&ved=2ahUKEwj5tIr09OGLAxUCAjQIHe00GOwQFnoECD4QAQ&usg=AOvVaw2jufUUeTe6Ps79sBHVo9tV

Grew up in Boston, Bose speakers were everywhere. As a kid, the 901's were amazing. But at that time, all I cared about was loud, party speakers were my main speakers. In fact had speaker from floor to ceiling in my bedroom, that would only be played at concert volume. 

Still think they look cool, have been thinking about getting a used pair, as they show up on Craigslist all the time for $400-800