Bose 901 Review Well Done.


hersch8888

hsbrock

Yes, I still have the article in one of my stereo file folders. I was 16 at the time, myself. I did not hear them for another couple years but the article interested me.

As stated above, I also have my original receipt from 1976, when I bought my second stereo set up. I have a photo of my first stereo, which I bought right before getting drafted. I had a Pilot 65wpc receiver (considered powerful at the time), Realistic TT and Nova 8 speakers from Radio Shack. It wasn't terrible for a teenage kid and first stereo. Best in the barracks until I went to Germany. 

Yeah my first big buy...901s series 2 bought them used for $315  back in 1973 .I ran them with a Sony Str 7065.They were great ,I was just married 21 into Led Zeppelin and they could handle them,no problem. Had a Technics 1300 TT Shure V15 cart and my set up was great .I used them until 1995..had them stored and the speakers rings,all deteriorated..16 speakers are alot to redo...whan I move I thrashed them,sadly to say...I had no room for them in my new place.

Such a lively thread! My contribution has to do with not “what’s best”, but with what I like and find most interesting- which involves owning a bunch of very different systems, each with very different vintage speakers:

-Quad ESL 57’s

-Monitor Audio MA2’s

-Altec 604’s in 620 cabinets

-ADS 801’s

-Linn Kan’s

-Yamaha NS10’s

-Bose 901 series IV with equalizer

They all have their “place”. I don’t listen to the Yamahas for fun- they’re great tools for mixing and sound design, as befits their rep. The Quads get the best upstream gear I can afford, and have pride of place in my home living room- solo, couch-based listening at its best. The Monitor Audios are great in my art studio- well-balanced, forgiving, good off-axis in a large live space. Linn Kans are fine for film sound when projecting movies (w. sub). The ADS 810’s are comfy in a social/game playing space in my vacation home for mostly non-critical rock, r&b and jazz listening with family and friends. Finally, and most recently I bought a used pair of 901’s for my new screen porch, positioning them against a solid wall, hooked up an old Creek integrated I had lying around, and finally heard them in all their good, bad and ugly glory. Everything written above is true- except that the EQ is at best optional. No- it’s necessary. Unless you take the eq out of the signal chain as a “special effect” applied to stripped-down dub- the sort of trick-in-the-mix Lee Perry might have come up with . . . And yes, they still sound great heard from an annoyed neighbor’s house across the lake!