Hi-fi industry chases the high-end

The mood at the Sound and Vision Show was buoyant, despite the challenging conditions facing the UK hi-fi industry

The annual Sound and Vision Show at Bristol’s Marriot hotel each February is undoubtedly the most important hi-fi show in the UK calendar.

This year, the Bristol show celebrated its 21st birthday, showcasing 192 brands to the public.

State of the hi-fi market

The mood at the Sound and Vision Show was buoyant, despite the challenging conditions facing the UK hi-fi industry. If the UK is any indication, the hi-fi market is noticeably shifting to favour high-priced, high-end audio gear at the expense of mid-range and budget systems.

Increasingly, there’s little gain to be had in catering for the middle ground. ‘Serious’ audiophiles will spend ‘serious’ money on luxurious, big-name brands. At the other end of the scale, high-capacity MP3 players and iPod docks have all but replaced entry-level audio gear. It’s hobbyist vs. convenience.

I want my MP3

Digital audio and wireless streaming were two key trends that gained traction at this year’s Sound and Vision Show.

Rubbing shoulders with hi-fi stalwarts such as Meridian and Cyrus were streaming media companies such as Sonos and Squeezebox. The latter pulled in the crowds with its innovative Squeezebox Duet system, complete with iPod-like remote control.

Computer audio sympathiser AVI also shocked the hi-fi cognoscenti with its deliberately minimalist hotel room, which comprised an active AVI sub/sat system with iTunes-equipped laptop.

Naim managed to raise a few eyebrows as well, using an iTunes-equipped laptop (in addition to one of its own CD players) to demonstrate the new SuperNait integrated amp.

Respected hi-fi brands such as Denon, Onkyo and Arcam all now build MP3 functionality into key products. It’s a measure of the credibility that digital audio players, especially Apple’s iPods, now have in the hi-fi industry.

Serious hi-fi

Back at the high-end, the more conservative digital expert, Meridian, continued to fly the flag for hi-fi traditionalists. It launched its new £7,195 flagship 808.2 Signature Reference CD player to drooling audiences.

Sanctuary was available too in the Chord Electronics room, where the £13,345 Red Reference CD player was on demo.

However, despite the trend for ‘high-end’ audio, the UK’s most significant high-end distributor, Absolute Sounds (Krell, Audio Research etc), was not exhibiting at Bristol. Neither was Symmetry (Mark Levinson, Ayre, Esoteric) or UKD (Pathos, Graff, Unison Research).

One surprise of the show was the public’s apparent delight that the HD DVD/Blu-ray format war was finally over. Experts in the Sony room were on hand to answer questions about Blu-ray and assist those eager consumers who’d been delaying buying an HD video player until the battle had played out.

The show must go on

Although the consensus was that there were less exhibitors at Bristol this year, numbers through the doors remained high. Crucially, the crowds harboured a number of ‘hardcore’ show-goers who were genuinely interested in what was on offer.

Naim’s Doug Graham summed up the Sound and Vision Show’s significance: “Bristol is now, without doubt, the most influential show in the diary. Attendees certainly took the opportunity to ‘meet the manufacturer’ and throughout the weekend we had lively debate during our demonstrations”.

If you missed it this year, be sure to pencil-in the dates for 2009 - 21st and 22nd of February.

The TechRadar hive mind. The Megazord. The Voltron. When our powers combine, we become 'TECHRADAR STAFF'. You'll usually see this author name when the entire team has collaborated on a project or an article, whether that's a run-down ranking of our favorite Marvel films, or a round-up of all the coolest things we've collectively seen at annual tech shows like CES and MWC. We are one.

Latest in Hi-Fi
Klipsch Klipschorn AK7 in a room with lots of dark wood furniture and a bare brick wall
Klipsch just updated two of its most iconic stereo speaker designs, keeping these beautiful retro icons on your most-wanted list
The Creative Pebble Nova on a brown table, connected to a green laptop.
Creative's new otherworldly desktop speakers belong on an alien spaceship – and they're so good, I'd abduct them
SluTune Q1 Bluetooth speaker
I love this super-slim, sleep-friendly Bluetooth speaker – but the name's a nightmare
Vertere DG-X turntable on a pink/white TechRadar background
Vertere's elite DG X turntable is modular, expensive, and hugely desirable
Will.i.am speaking about XBoom speakers at CES 2025, wearing all black with a black cap
'Exploitative use of AI is social media; we already have it – it's called you don't own your data’: will.i.am talks tech, LG, and using AI responsibly
JBL Charge 6
JBL's new Bluetooth speakers bring all the upgrades I most wanted to see, and they're coming soon
Latest in News
Buzz Lightyear Space Ranger Spin Rennovations
Disney’s giving a classic Buzz Lightyear ride a tech overhaul – here's everything you need to know
Hisense U8 series TV on wall in living room
Hisense announces 2025 mini-LED TV lineup, with screen sizes up to 100 inches – and a surprising smart TV switch
Nintendo Music teaser art
Nintendo Music expands its library with songs from Kirby and the Forgotten Land and Tetris
Opera AI Tabs
Opera's new AI feature brings order to your browser tab chaos
An image of Pro-Ject's Flatten it closed and opened
Pro-Ject’s new vinyl flattener will fix any warped LPs you inadvertently buy on Record Store Day
The iPhone 16 Pro on a grey background
iPhone 17 Pro tipped to get 8K video recording – but I want these 3 video features instead