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Jonathan Bell

‘Audio Erotica’ charts home audio through promotional graphics and imagery

Home audio promtional imagery of retro-futuristic white living space from the book Audio Erotica: Hi-Fi Brochures 1950s-1980s.

Following on from the publisher’s earlier Auto Erotica, Jonny Trunk and FUEL have now delved into the heady world of hi-fi advertising and brochure design. Audio Erotica: Hi-Fi Brochures 1950s-1980s is an alphabetical stroll through the best examples of the genre, exploring obscure brands (and some survivors) and the ways in which design and art direction was used to emphasise performance and sonic excellence. 

A landscape of Philips products, c1970 (Image credit: Fuel Publishing)

These were heady days for home entertainment. The pre-digital age was often driven by innovation and gimmicks, with the promise of portability and power often cutting straight to clichéd images of swinging lovers and seductive listening situations. At the same time, the book also delves into the po-faced world of ultra-high fidelity, where presentation methods tend to be way more sober. 

The kitsch and the retro triumph in Audio Erotica

A 1973 advert from the Southwest Technical Products Corporation  (Image credit: Fuel Publishing)

As Trunk notes in his introduction, the book also charts the evolution of home listening, as hi-fi evolved to become less of an engineering challenge for the dedicated hobbyist and more of a consumer product. With devices shrinking due to transistorisation, designers had more space to play with colour and form. Speakers, on the other hand, were to equate scale with quality for many years – the ultra-compact speaker is a very modern invention – hence the presence of so many furniture-sized objects in the book.

A 1970 advert for the German brand Dual (Image credit: Fuel Publishing)

As always, it’s the kitsch and the retro that triumph, whether it’s the slightly inappropriate adverts, the monumental scale of certain pieces of kit, or the memory-jogging sight of dead brands and failed mediums. It also helps that, to modern eyes, much of the featured equipment remains highly desirable, in spite of (or perhaps because of) its age and style.

The genre-defining Sony Walkman (Image credit: Fuel Publishing)

The big brands get plenty of space to revisit their wares, from Bang & Olufsen’s always on-trend minimalism to Philips’ pop graphical approach and Sony’s fashion-forward styles. With recent trends pointing to an ongoing analogue revival – be it record players and vinyl storage, cassette players, CD players, or even the stylings of the products themselves – Audio Erotica is a richly idiosyncratic journey through the changing shapes of sound.

(Image credit: Fuel Publishing)

Audio Erotica: Hi-Fi Brochures 1950s-1980s, by Jonny Trunk, FUEL Publishing, £26.95, Fuel-design.com, @Fuelpublishing

Also available from Amazon

Left, Akai goes robotic in the 70s. Right, an advert for Massachusetts-based Scott  (Image credit: Fuel Publishing)
The British audio brand Bush (Image credit: Fuel Publishing)
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