In 1974 I lived in an apartment building in Somerville, MA. This was long before it became gentrified and housed artists and hipsters. My next door neighbor was an architectural photographer, a few years older than me.* I learned a lot from Bob. He had a pair of whatever the big Bose speakers were at that time (901s?).
I was young and 100% ignorant about audio, but had loved music my whole life. He knew I liked classical but wasn’t in touch with 20th century modernism. So one day he put the Bartok Violin concerto on those Bose speakers and proceeded to utterly blow my mind. I’ve been a huge of fan of Bartok and modernism ever since.
I thought those must be the best speakers in the world. 10 years later when I was putting together my own high end system, I was kind of surprised to learn that Bose speakers were detested by many in the high end. It wasn’t the last time I was surprised by the intersection of music, audio technology, and social perception.
*Bob moved to Hollywood to pursue work in film making. He probably started out as an assistant cinematographer or something like that (he was a superb photographer with his big 4" x 5" view camera), then later became a director. Among the films he directed is the cult classic, HITCHER; and a bunch of very entertaining JESSE STONE films starring Tom Selleck. Most recently he directed 23 episodes of BLUE BLOODS for TV. A very talented man.