Bang & Olufsen

Danish design that sounds as good as it looks

History

Bang & Olufsen (B&O) was founded in 1925 in Struer, Denmark, by two visionary engineers: Peter Bang and Svend Olufsen. Their partnership began in a family attic, where they experimented with radio technology at a time when most receivers required cumbersome batteries. Their breakthrough came in 1927 with the invention of the 'Eliminator'—a device that allowed radios to operate directly from alternating current (AC) power, eliminating the need for batteries and revolutionizing home audio. This innovation laid the foundation for B&O’s reputation as a pioneer in audio engineering. Throughout the mid-20th century, B&O expanded its product range from radios to televisions, turntables, and high-fidelity systems, always emphasizing elegant design and technical excellence. The 1970s marked a turning point when industrial designer Jacob Jensen joined the company, shaping B&O’s iconic minimalist aesthetic. His work on products like the Beogram 4000 solidified the brand’s status as a leader in both form and function. The 1990s saw B&O embrace digital technology and active speaker design with the launch of the Beolab series, integrating amplification and digital signal processing directly into speakers. This era established B&O as a premium audio brand with a global presence. Today, Bang & Olufsen continues to innovate with high-end wireless audio systems, smart speakers, and home integration, maintaining its headquarters in Struer and a reputation for luxury, craftsmanship, and cutting-edge engineering.

Key Facts

FactDetail
Founded1925, Struer, Denmark
FounderPeter Bang and Svend Olufsen
First Product"The Eliminator" (1927)
Golden Era1970s–1990s
Famous FeatureTangential tonearm turntables, aluminum enclosures
Current StatusActive, publicly traded, global luxury brand

Legendary Products

Beogram 4000 (1972)

Designed by Jacob Jensen, the Beogram 4000 was a marvel of engineering and design. Its sleek aluminum base, horizontal tonearm, and precision mechanics introduced a new standard in turntable aesthetics. The linear-tracking tangential tonearm reduced record wear and improved tracking accuracy, making it both a technical and design landmark.

Beolab 8000 (1992)

One of the first active loudspeakers for the consumer market, the Beolab 8000 integrated amplification and digital crossover technology into a sculptural, space-saving design. Its coaxial driver array delivered coherent sound imaging, while its minimalist form became a modernist icon.

Beomaster 2400 (1978)

A high-end receiver that epitomized B&O’s design philosophy, the Beomaster 2400 featured a brushed aluminum faceplate, intuitive rotary controls, and exceptional build quality. It was part of a modular system that could integrate with turntables, tape decks, and speakers.

Beolab 90 (2015)

The pinnacle of B&O’s engineering, the Beolab 90 is a $85,000 active speaker with 8,200 watts of power, 18 drivers, and adaptive room compensation. Featuring beam-width control and advanced DSP, it delivers reference-level sound with dramatic visual presence.

Sound Signature

Bang & Olufsen has always approached sound differently from the audiophile mainstream, and the results are genuinely distinctive. Vintage B&O gear — particularly the Beomaster receivers and Beogram turntables — delivers a presentation that's clean, composed, and spatially precise. There's a refinement here that mirrors the industrial design: nothing is exaggerated, nothing draws attention to itself, and the overall effect is music that feels natural and unforced. The tangential-tracking tonearms on the Beogram turntables reduce inner-groove distortion in a way you can genuinely hear on the last tracks of a record.

The active Beolab speakers represent a different philosophy entirely. By integrating amplification and digital crossovers directly into the speaker, B&O achieved a level of driver control and phase coherence that passive designs struggle to match. The Beolab 8000 columns, for all their sculptural beauty, are serious audio tools that produce a wide, stable soundstage with pinpoint imaging. B&O's sound has always prioritized accuracy and spatial realism over the warm coloration that some listeners prefer — these are systems for people who want to hear the recording, not an editorialized version of it.

Collecting Bang & Olufsen

B&O collecting sits at the intersection of audio enthusiasm and design appreciation, and the community is passionate about both. The Beogram 4000 is the centerpiece — Jacob Jensen's iconic turntable with its tangential tonearm, fetching $1,500-5,000 depending on condition and completeness. The Beomaster 2400 receiver, with its brushed aluminum faceplate and intuitive controls, typically runs $400-900 and makes a stunning shelf piece that also happens to sound wonderful. Vintage Beolab 8000 speaker columns have become mid-century-modern design icons, trading at $800-2,000 per pair.

What makes B&O collecting unique is that condition and completeness matter enormously. These were designed as total aesthetic objects — a scratched aluminum panel or missing remote control significantly affects both the experience and the value. Original packaging and documentation add real premium. The modular system design means you can build a complete vintage B&O setup piece by piece, with matching turntable, receiver, cassette deck, and speakers all sharing the same design language. When evaluating pieces, pay close attention to the aluminum surfaces (they should have an even, unblemished finish) and test all motorized functions on turntables — B&O's mechanical engineering is sophisticated, and repairs require specialist knowledge.

Competitors & Comparisons

B&O competes with brands like Linn, Naim, and Quad in the high-end audio space, but stands apart through its design-first philosophy. While Linn focuses on purist analog performance, B&O blends aesthetics, innovation, and luxury into a cohesive lifestyle proposition.
Models

Amplifiers

Audio Equipment

Audio System

Cassette Decks

Equalizers

Hifi System

Music Systems

Radio

Receivers

Speakers

Turntables

Other Models