His approach was to strive to extract much more information from the long-play gramophone record (otherwise known as the LP), and to make the turntable immune to audio feedback.
Tiefenbrun also argued against industry notables like Edgar Villchur, who felt that loudspeakers were the most important aspect of the audio playback chain, instead asserting the primacy of "the front end" (that the quality of the source was key to hi-fidelity music reproduction).
By the end of the 1970s, Tiefenbrun's views had gained significant ground and large numbers of dealers and audiophiles had accepted "primacy of the source" as the norm in the United Kingdom and then around the world.
[9] The business suffered considerably during his absence,[10] and the bank put Linn on their "special measures" list in 2006 and a massive restructuring plan was ordered.
[11] Sara moved to Australia in 2008 and runs The School of Life in Melbourne[12] Ivor revealed that he was suffering from Crohn's colitis, a debilitating autoimmune bowel disorder.