![]() The LS-200A loudspeaker, a ported model, was reviewed in May 1984, in Stereo Review. His wife Lillian and their son-in-law Don Parks reorganized the company and quality of workmanship made a brief comeback from 1983 to 1985. Jack Webb put a pair in his Mark VII Productions listening room. Henry Mancini and Benny Goodman, good friends of Rudy Bozak, owned Concert Grand speaker systems. The model line continued to be manufactured by Bozak until 1977. Such a high price limited ownership to a small number of hi-fi aficionados and audiophiles. ![]() In 1965, a pair of B-410 Concert Grands cost US$2000. ![]() The Concert Grand loudspeakers were designed to fill large spaces and were not at their best with listeners closer than 20 feet away. All Concert Grand models starting from the B-310A contained two 16 Ohm B-209 midrange drivers. The 'stereo' B-310B and B-400 had the eight tweeters arranged in a vertical row. The B-310 and B-310A were the mono versions in which the tweeters were arranged as a sector of a sphere for widest distribution of high frequencies. This refrigerator-sized speaker system originally contained four B-199 12' woofers, one 8 Ohm B-209 6' midrange driver and eight tweeters. The Concert Grand was the crown jewel of Bozak speaker systems since its introduction in 1951. ![]()
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