The challenge of this story was not buying one on the spot, not jumping on Kickstarter, putting down the $250, then circling May on my calendar and waiting. But that's a lot of money for an impulsive purchase. Still, I want to have that horn on my desk. want to listen to music coming out of it. So I'll hold off, for now, just to give myself something to look forward to.
Early last January, college friends Pavan
Bapu and Jeff Parrish were walking through Wicker Park when they passed an
antique store and saw a 1920s Magnavox R3 gramophone in the window.
"We both did a double take,"
said Parrish. "We ended up tracking them down on eBay and bought one to
play around with it."
The graceful curving horn was originally
made to amplify thick 78 rpm discs. The two, who met at UIC, decided they could
do better.
"We figured out a way to modernize
it, to make it suitable for people now," Parrish said. By February they
had a prototype: a Bluetooth receiver within a sleek wooden base, attached to
the gramophone horn.
"It was pretty big," said
Parrish.
Bapu put some images and a description on a
website and 500 people liked it. That got them thinking.
"What if we scaled this thing down,
made it less intimidating, less filling somebody's space?" Parrish said.
"We tried out a number of different sizes, and settled on three-quarters
[of the original] - big enough to have amplification and presence, and small
enough to fit on somebody's table."
They decided they had something to sell.
Pavan handled the "nitty-gritty
electronic stuff" using knowledge he picked up clerking at Best Buy.
"We created our own proprietary audio
driver and printed circuit board inside, acoustically optimized for this
product," said Bapu, 27. "So we didn't just do a hack job. We put in
something that resonates with the harmonics of this horn."
Parrish's background is engineering and
industrial design; Bapu's is communications. "Between the stuff I know and
the stuff Pavan knows, we've got our bases covered," Parrish said.
"We both have a good bunch of contacts that we've got from our time in
school and from various employment opportunities since then."
They started out putting drawings online,
searching for manufacturers.
"We got quotes from people around the
world. It's pretty cool," Parrish said. "Pavan found people by
Googling what we need."
They need people to give money, for
instance. Pavan went on Kickstarter, saw a video he liked and contacted its
creator, who produced a video for them. Their Kickstarter campaign went up Nov.
26. In fewer than three weeks, they've raised $120,000; more than their goal. The
Gramovox devices cost $299, or
$250 for those who contribute on Kickstarter, and they plan to start shipping
in the spring.
As much as I like the design, which I
noticed on my Facebook stream, I love that these two guys, who have never
started a business before, quickly went from seeing an obscure antique in a
window, to manufacturing and selling their own version. "In less than a
year we went from concept to prototype to production," Bapu said. That's
what our country is about, or should be.
I wanted to hear it, so I biked over to Pavan's
apartment at 11th and State. Pavan played Bill Withers' "Ain't No
Sunshine." There was a resonance to it. Then Nancy Sinatra singing,
"Bang, Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)." I'm used to an iPod, which has
the acoustics of mud, but you could hear Sinatra forming the consonants - the
Bs, the Ds - as if she had her lips against your ear. Then Louis Armstrong,
"When You're Smiling." What more perfect way to hear a master's horn
than out of the bell of a metal horn?
I took my iPhone out to see how the Bluetooth
aspect works, and within seconds was playing George Gershwin's
"Tip-Toes." It filled the room.
Lest audiophiles descend on me, I should
point out it's still a unidirectional 1920s horn. I'm sure any Polk Audio
speaker has better acoustics. My perception was no doubt skewed by how much I
admire the thing. There's a wonderful aesthetic to the horn, and I'm the son of
a radio operator, who has, displayed in my office, his Turner X-22 crystal
microphone and his chrome-plated Vibroplex telegraph key, because they're
lovely, to me.
Whether the world will find the Gramovox Bluetooth Gramophone lovely
too, well, we'll find out in a few months. They ship in May. I can see it as
the big audio gift of Christmas 2014 because it looks so good, sounds crisp,
doesn't cost all that much and points society back to a place it used to be:
where you listened to music with other people, together, out of a curving horn.
They've raised more than $130,000 on Kickstarter, well more their goal. You can see their complete fundraising presentation and excellent video by clicking here.
Pavan Bapu, with the Gramovox. |
What's next?
ReplyDeleteA Model T with solar power?
A jet powered Ford Tri-Motor?
A wide screen Philco Predicta?
Just ridiculous!
They will sell a small number to decorators, especially set decorators in Hollywood, it will be a two week sensation among the hipsters, who will then go on to the next big thing that the rest of us will also ignore!
I find that the people who most boldly predict the future are often the ones most mired in the past.
ReplyDeleteI love this, not so much for me as most of my music is still in CD form but I think it would make a great gift!.
ReplyDeleteYes, a great gift. That's what people say when they buy something for someone else that they would never buy for themselves because it's a stupid idea.
DeleteLike all the crap flogged on TV for the next ten days with the line: And it makes a great gift".
Each & every one of these things that do get bought will end up on a shelf gathering dust.
Tell me: How many people still have that clacking balls that hang from strings that you pull back & let collide into each other. They actually demonstrate a principle of Newton's Laws, but they were a fad, just like Beanie Babies, Wacky Wall Walkers & who among us doesn't have a hula hoop somewhere buried away that's never used?
Again, not to intrude with reality Becca, but Beanie Babies have been selling for the past 20 years. They're not the mania they once were, but they certainly aren't a fad either.
ReplyDeleteTell that to the people who bought thousands of them think they were going to become millionaires when they sold them. They're worth less than what they paid for them!
DeleteEven better, try to tell that to Ty Warner, their creator, who will soon be a guest of the United States at a Club Fed near you!
Warner was the first company to market soft, real looking stuffed animals. One day he decided to make a smaller toy that children could hold in their hand with a very low price point.People started collecting certain ones and soon they were trading and selling. It did become a real fad and values of limited edition beanies went for lots of money. That ended when TY said he would stop making some of them and people thought he meant no more forever. They are still sold along with other plush toys.
DeleteGreat article. Looks and sounds very cool.
ReplyDeleteWhy do people think that everything has to appeal to absolutely everyone in order to have value? Music lovers will love it.
ReplyDelete