Roger Alan Modjeski (RAM) 1951 - 2019


It is with great sadness that I announce Roger A. Modjeski passed away peacefully in his home in San Pablo, CA after an 12 month battle with cancer. Roger started Music Reference in 1981 and later RAM Tubes, The Tube Audio Store, and The Berkeley HiFi School. For more than 38 years he tirelessly ran his business and designed some of the most unique and well received audio components in the industry. Right until the near end Roger was working, designing, and teaching until he physically was unable to continue.

The link below will take you my playground where I have posted my tribute to Roger (click ENTER after the page loads):

http://www.electrafidelity.com/

Fare thee well my friend.
clio09
@bdp24 , IIRC my speakers were supposedly not be good R@R speakers. And maybe they weren’t cause they lacked bass. But I fixed that with 2 Sumiko S-10 subs (RelS-5 clones) But I like the clean mids and highs. I think the RM-10  review was at audio review. Supposedly, it's  lacking PRaT. Who knows? one review does not make for good research. I’ll figure it out. I did like RM’s approach. The 6 moons spends too much time talking about Roger and not the speakers. Been pretty busy but I’ll look again and find the actual listening results. Anyway, thanks for the heads up on this. I have a Bob Latino ST-70 which is totally outclassed by the rest of my system at this point. Yet it seems to pull its weight in spite of the fact that everything in the system costs 4 times (and more) than it did BTW it replaced an amp  4x the cost. I know the ST-70 can be bettered. But living in fly over country, there is no one or place to listen to better. But I am curious as to what my system can sound like with a better amp.OK, I’m ramblin’ now. Thanks

The notion that the RM-10 is an amp that can't play rock music is just plain silly.
What a wonderful man. I had numerous encounters with him right about the time in 2008 that ARC was up for sale and we talked a lot about how he would run that company. I still can't get the sound of his electrostatic speakers that he demoed for me at his house out of my head. Some of the most enjoyable listening I've had.
Roger was one of my best friends for 30 years. He was logical to the point of pain-in-the-ass and we spent hundreds of hours on the phone when we didn't live in the same town, talking about science and theories and unraveling the universe.  He taught me so much, but if there's one lesson brightest in my mind it's to always ask, "How do you know?" And it's amazing how many answers fail that simplest of tests. 

"Let's find out," he would say.