Site Links
Recent Additions
Budget Components
Audacious Audio
J. Gordon Holt

Loudspeakers
Floorstanding Loudspeakers
Bookshelf Loudspeakers
Subwoofers

Amplification
Tube Preamps
Tube Power Amps
Solid-State Preamps
Solid-State Power Amps
Integrated Amps/Receivers
Phono Preamps

Digital Sources
CD Players/Transports
Hi-Rez Disc Players/Transports
Digital Processors
Computer Audio
Media Servers/MP3 Players

Analog Sources
Turntables
Tonearms
Phono Cartridges
FM Tuners

Accessories
Cables
Phono Accessories
Powerline Accessories
Room Acoustics Treatments
Stands/Racks
Headphones & Accessories
Miscellaneous

As We See It
Listening / Art Dudley
The Fifth Element / John Marks
Music in the Round / Kal Rubinson
Fine Tunes / Jonathan Scull

Special Features
Reference
Interviews
Think Pieces
Historical

Recording of the Month
Records 2 Die 4
Music/Recordings
Stephen Mejias
Robert Baird
Fred Kaplan
Wes Phillips

Audio News
Past eNewsletters

SSI 2010
AXPONA 2010
CES 2010
RMAF 2009
SSI 2009
CES 2009
RMAF 2008
FSI 2008
CES 2008
RMAF 2007
CEDIA 2007
HE 2007
FSI 2007
CES 2007
China 2006
RMAF 2006
HFN 2006
CEDIA 2006
HE 2006
FSI 2006
CES 2006
Forums
Galleries
Vote
Previous Votes
AV Links
Audiophile Societies
Contact Us
Customer Service
New Subscription
Digital Subscription
Renew
Give a Gift
Sub Services
Recordings
Backissues
More . . .
Phono Preamp
Hi-Fi
Phono Cartridge
Amplifiers
Stereo Speakers
Online Oasis for Marantz Classic Audio Fans Bookmark and Share
January 30, 1999 — Musician, martial artist, and electronics whiz Ben Blish has loved audio since he was a little kid staring into the glowing tubes of his father's Scott hi-fi equipment. Thirty-four years after catching the bug, he still nurtures it daily.

Blish is one of many audionuts who are keen on classic Marantz equipment. Most such hobbyists are content to collect a few rare pieces, or assemble a mint-condition "classic system." Blish has done that, but he's also gone a huge step further: he's built an online temple to Marantz gear of the 1960s and '70s. His Marantz pages---part of an extensive personal website that encompasses everything from antique personal computers to his taste in art---feature pictures, specifications, and prices of almost every product Marantz made before 1980.

Included in Blish's database is everything you could want to know about the 22 different tuners, 13 preamps, 22 power amplifiers, 25 integrated amplifiers, 58 receivers, and assorted other products the legendary Marantz company built before selling out to erstwhile Sony distributor Superscope in 1980. No "SR" or "PM" junk allowed, thank you very much. Blish doesn’t consider anything after that period worthy of inclusion, despite the fact that recent Marantz products, such as their CD players, have come a long way toward redeeming the venerable name. (The brand is now owned by Philips of Holland and manufactured in Japan.)

75% of Marantz products from the classic era have pictures to accompany the facts, and Blish is actively looking for more. Anything you can contribute will be greatly appreciated, he says. His site has links to sources for service manuals and replacement parts, and cautionary advice for those attempting to repair or restore any piece of old Marantz gear.

Blish's advice about the care and treatment of Marantz tuners is especially useful. The company's tuners, like those made by McIntosh, have a well-deserved reputation for great performance and excellent sound.

Visitors should take the time to browse Blish's site. It's ambitious, entertaining, and as big as Montana---where, appropriately enough, its creator lives.

Sponsored Technology Center


 
Credit CardBill me later
 
 

 

Stereophile    ::     Home Theater    ::     Ultimate AV    ::     Home Theater Design    ::     Shutterbug
Home/News • Subscribe • Give a Gift • Sub Services • Digital Subscription
Recordings • Back Issues • Buyer's Guide • Print & Web Media Kit • Privacy • Terms of Use • Contact
RSS News & Reviews • RSS Blogs

Copyright © SOURCE INTERLINK MEDIA All rights reserved.