It's sad to hear of the loss of such a pioneer in his field. I remember hearing my cousin's Senns sometime around '71 or '72. He had a pair of the very early open cans, with the wide pads. It was, to say the least, an ear-opening experience for an eleven-or-twelve-year-old kid.
Mr. Sennheiser was one of the last of a rapidly disappearing breed -- the genius entrepreneur/technologist whose products flowed directly from his vision. These days so many brands have absolutely nothing to do with the people or firms who originated them. A brand is simply a commodity to be exploited by grinning ad men and venal marketing twits, who don't understand their own products, and care only about how much revenue they can squeeze from the brand's reputation.
The Sennheiser name couldn't be farther from that sort of hollow, soulless marketing. The company is still 100 percent owned by -- wait for it-- the actual Sennheiser family. As Mr. Sennheiser's NYT obit relates,
Founded in 1945 in Wedemark with a staff of seven, Sennheiser now employs more than 2,100 people around the world. The company, which is wholly owned by the Sennheiser family, has manufacturing plants in Germany, Ireland and Albuquerque. In 2008, Sennheiser recorded sales of about $500 million, according to its Web site.
I would call that doing well by doing good. May he rest in peace.
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