But, unlike my brother who was usually asleep as soon as his head hit the pillow, I was always wide awake way after I should have been for my age. My father, an electronic engineer, loved all types of music and would be in his workshop repairing and building equipment sometimes way into the early hours of the morning. With my mind racing with exciting ideas for the coming day, the music relaxed me and every song that played seemed to capture my imagination and would always succeed in keeping the tiredness at bay until the next one and the next......
From a very young age, electronics became almost second nature to me. I would spend hours with my father in his workshop, watching intensely his every move, picking things up and asking "what's this, what's it for?..." and probably many other questions along the same lines. Eventually, my father would stop what he was doing after several attempts to ignore this very persistent child and realising he wouldn't get any peace at that moment until he had satisfied my curiosity, he would almost always manage to come up with an explanation that I could grasp. I was a child when valves were still pretty much in everyday use, and it is the familiarity of those glass bottles that I associate with those early childhood days and my affection for them is still as strong as ever.
When I became a teenager, I became intensely interested in guitars and after what seemed weeks and months of nagging and sulking, my parents finally gave in and bought me my first electric guitar. It was like Christmas! I spent every spare hour playing it - well, making noises anyway! When I was about 14, I made my first real complete piece of electronics: a guitar affects pedal! This inevitably led to the completion of my first guitar amplifier and so on...
My late teens is when my real interest in Hi Fi began, but as I progressed into my twenties, I became more and more disappointed by the results of my many experiences with the run of the mill audio equipment that was within the reach of the everyday man in the street. So there was only one alternative, to build my own system! I remembered how good a system sounded that my father had when I was a child; of course it was all valve! So this sent me on a painstaking journey. Starting-off with salvaged parts, constructing amps, preamps, etc, listening, testing, learning from each creation, going on to building better, more accurate and presentable equipment. Also finding out how all the individual parts worked and most important of all, "how everything interacted". Needless to say all this experience has given me a vast understanding of what makes a good or bad system. I have also learned to have an open mind, and not be afraid to "think outside of the box" and deviate from what is recognised to be the norm. All the equipment I now make is the result of my own painstaking experiments and experiences, although I feel without the help and knowledge I received from that one person as a child, and the passion he gave me for music and electronics, none of this would have been possible. That brings me to the end of this brief but factual account of my many years involved in audio and electronics. Just one thing left to say, "Thanks Dad..."
"Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind."Albert-Einstein
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