Death of Jim Bongiorno


I was informed yesterday that Jim Bongiorno, long time influential audio engineer, has passed from this life. It looks like he had problems from his liver disease that took him. From what I can gather, he died on January 10th, 2013. I did a search on Audiogon and saw no mention of it.

James was a legend having a hand in engineering products from Hadley Laboratories, Marantz, Dynaco, Scientific Audio Electronics (SAE), Great American Sound (GAS), Sumo, and Spread Spectrum Technologies.

For me, it was the GAS equipment that was my first introduction into high end audio. How could you forget the names: Ampzilla, Thaedra, Charlie The Tuner? (Charlie had a name change to just "Charlie" due to the conflict with Starkist Tuna and their marketing campaign in the '60's and '70's with "Charlie, The Tuna".)

I still have my Son of Ampzilla and matching Thoebe preamp.

Thanks, James, and all who were with him during his career.
jwmazur

Showing 1 response by normansizemore

I was recently reading reviews of Jim's work. Bascom King's original review of Ampzilla, TAS review of Grandson and Theadra, Stereophile review of Sumo's amps. One thing that consistently comes up is how musical they were. I can't agree more. They're are amps with more bottom end, preamps that throw a wider soundstage, but in all that Jim designed, one can't escape how the music connects with the listener. There is a true sonic signature in all of his work, and I applaud it. Grandson is among my all time favorite amps. It still knocks me out how 'musical' the little guy is. I imagine that Jim's work will be doing the same for many years to come.