If Stradivarius were alive
today, his name would probably be
Strådivårisen.


For more than three centuries, experts have been trying to discover the secret behind some rather good sounding small wooden boxes from Cremona, Italy.

For the last two decades, some small wooden boxes from Skanderborg, Denmark, have turned out to be just as puzzling.

Why do our loudspeakers sound so open, airy and natural?

Why do even some of our smaller (but perfectly shaped) speakers sound more transparent, more precise and less aggressive than some coffin-sized aberrations right next to them in the shop?

How do we manage to get such well-defined and powerful deep bass?

Which makes itself heard only when it would be heard live, not as a constant reminder of the bass driver's existence?

What moves professionals like violin builder Wolfgang S. from B. to go visit a shop "just for fun" and leave with a pair of our Confidence 5 speakers on a flatbed truck?

(Thanks for the nice letter; we hope your nephew's appetite for our dome tweeters was just a passing affection?)

The answer can really only he experienced through listening. And feeling.


A true genius: Børge "The Ear" Jensen.


But we still would still to give you a few hints on the Path of Truth.


Danes don't lie.


desk

A Danish designer desk.

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